Role of Individual Amino Acids in the Action of Caspase Inhibitors as Proapoptotic Peptides for Human Leukemia.

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1998-1998
Author(s):  
Rebecca J. Asch ◽  
Nisha Shah ◽  
Tucker W. LeBien

Abstract Three to five amino acid caspase inhibitors have been extensively used to identify the role of specific caspases in apoptotic pathways triggered by a wide range of cellular insults. Unexpectedly, we have recently demonstrated that the irreversible caspase-9 inhibitor (C9i) Z-LEHD-FMK can promote apoptosis in selected stressed and non-stressed human leukemic cells, and that inhibition of caspase-9 protein expression does not render cells more resistant to stress-induced apoptosis (Shah et al., Blood, in press 11/15/04). The goal of the current study was to analyze the role of caspase-9 in C9i-induced apoptosis, and the role of specific amino acids in the proapoptotic activity of C9i. We first determined whether cells made deficient in caspase-9 were still sensitive to the proapoptotic activity of C9i. Electroporation of the BLIN-4L stromal cell-dependent B-lineage ALL cell line and the RAMOS Burkitt lymphoma cell line with siRNA specific for caspase-9 led to >95% reduction of caspase-9 protein. Yet, both cells still exhibited a dose-dependent apoptotic response to C9i indistinguishable from cells electroporated with control siRNA. Since proapoptotic activity was not a property of inhibitors of caspases-2, 3, 6 and 8 (Shah et al.), we further examined the minimal structural requirements for the proapoptotic activity of C9i. The P1 aspartic acid and P3 glutamic acid are highly conserved in other caspase inhibitors that do not exhibit proapoptotic activity, so we initially focused on the P2 and P4 positions. The parent compound Z-LEHD-FMK was modified to yield Z-LEAD-FMK and Z-AEHD-FMK (synthesized by MP Biomedicals, Livermore, CA). Z-WEHD-FMK (commercially available as caspase-1 inhibitor) and Z-LEED-FMK (commercially available as caspase-13 inhibitor) were also studied. We tested several cell lines previously shown to be sensitive to C9i. As expected (Shah et al.), the BLIN-2, BLIN-3 and BLIN-4L adherent cell-dependent B-lineage ALL, the BLIN-1 pre-B ALL and the RAMOS Burkitt B cell lymphoma were sensitive to C9i as measured by TMRE and Annexin V staining. Strikingly, Z-LEAD-FMK and Z-LEED-FMK induced no apoptosis in the C9i sensitive targets. In contrast, Z-AEHD-FMK was weakly proapoptotic (at the maximum concentration of 100 μM) whereas Z-WEHD-FMK exhibited slightly greater proapoptotic activity than the parent compound Z-LEHD-FMK. Furthermore, Z-WEHD-FMK exhibited an overall pattern of proapoptotic activity against multiple sensitive and insensitive leukemic cell targets that was indistinguishable from Z-LEHD-FMK. Thus, the leucine at position P4 is expendable whereas the histidine at P2 is essential for proapoptotic activity of Z-LEHD-FMK. This pattern of apoptotic sensitivity to Z-LEHD-FMK and Z-WEHD-FMK extended to CD19+ B-lineage cells derived from cord blood HSC plated on the murine MS-5 stromal cell line. As a more stringent test of proapoptotic activity, the peptides were tested by limiting dilution analysis against RAMOS and K-562. Fifty μM Z-LEHD-FMK or 50 μM Z-WEHD-FMK exerted 2.5–3.0 log killing of RAMOS but had no effect on K-562. We conclude that selected peptides previously synthesized and widely used as caspase inhibitors harbor potent proapoptotic activity against human leukemic cells, which is unexpectedly distinct from their capacity to inhibit activated caspases.

Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
RC Stong ◽  
SJ Korsmeyer ◽  
JL Parkin ◽  
DC Arthur ◽  
JH Kersey

Abstract A cell line, designated RS4;11, was established from the bone marrow of a patient in relapse with an acute leukemia that was characterized by the t(4;11) chromosomal abnormality. The cell line and the patient's fresh leukemic cells both had the t(4;11)(q21;q23) and an isochromosome for the long arm of No. 7. Morphologically, all cells were lymphoid in appearance. Ultrastructurally and cytochemically, approximately 30% of the cells possessed myeloid features. The cells were strongly positive for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. They were HLA-DR positive and expressed surface antigens characteristic for B lineage cells, including those detected by anti-B4, BA-1, BA-2, and PI153/3. Immunoglobulin gene analysis revealed rearrangements of the heavy chain and kappa chain genes. The cells lacked the common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen and antigenic markers characteristic of T lineage cells. The cells reacted with the myeloid antibody 1G10 but not with other myeloid monoclonal antibodies. Treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoyl- phorbol-13-acetate induced a monocyte-like phenotype demonstrated by cytochemical, functional, immunologic, and electron microscopic studies. The expression of markers of both early lymphoid and early myeloid cells represents an unusual phenotype and suggests that RS4;11 represents a cell with dual lineage capabilities. To our knowledge, RS4;11 is the first cell line established from t(4;11)-associated acute leukemia.


Author(s):  
M. Seligmann ◽  
L. B. Vogler ◽  
P. Guglielmi ◽  
J. C. Brouet ◽  
J. L. Preud’homme

Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 1758-1766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp le Coutre ◽  
Elena Tassi ◽  
Marileila Varella-Garcia ◽  
Rossella Barni ◽  
Luca Mologni ◽  
...  

The 2-phenylaminopyrimidine derivative STI571 has been shown to selectively inhibit the tyrosine kinase domain of the oncogenicbcr/abl fusion protein. The activity of this inhibitor has been demonstrated so far both in vitro with bcr/abl expressing cells derived from leukemic patients, and in vivo on nude mice inoculated with bcr/abl positive cells. Yet, no information is available on whether leukemic cells can develop resistance to bcr/ablinhibition. The human bcr/abl expressing cell line LAMA84 was cultured with increasing concentrations of STI571. After approximately 6 months of culture, a new cell line was obtained and named LAMA84R. This newly selected cell line showed an IC50 for the STI571 (1.0 μM) 10-fold higher than the IC50 (0.1 μM) of the parental sensitive cell line. Treatment with STI571 was shown to increase both the early and late apoptotic fraction in LAMA84 but not in LAMA84R. The induction of apoptosis in LAMA84 was associated with the activation of caspase 3–like activity, which did not develop in the resistant LAMA84R cell line. LAMA84R cells showed increased levels of bcr/abl protein and mRNA when compared to LAMA84 cells. FISH analysis with BCR- and ABL-specific probes in LAMA84R cells revealed the presence of a marker chromosome containing approximately 13 to 14 copies of the BCR/ABL gene. Thus, overexpression of the Bcr/Abl protein mediated through gene amplification is associated with and probably determines resistance of human leukemic cells to STI571 in vitro.


Blood ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 873-878 ◽  
Author(s):  
FM Uckun ◽  
H Sather ◽  
G Reaman ◽  
J Shuster ◽  
V Land ◽  
...  

Mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) provide a model system to examine the in vivo homing, engraftment, and growth patterns of normal and malignant human hematopoietic cells. The relation between leukemic cell growth in this model and the treatment outcome in patients from whom cells were derived has not been established. Leukemic cells from 42 children with newly diagnosed high-risk B- lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia were inoculated intravenously into CB.17 SCID mice. Mice were killed at 12 weeks or when they became moribund as a result of disseminated leukemia. All mice were necropsied and subjected to a series of laboratory studies to assess their burden of human leukemic cells. Twenty-three patients whose leukemic cells caused histopathologically detectable leukemia in SCID mice had a significantly higher relapse rate than the 19 patients whose leukemic cells did not (estimated 5-year event-free survival: 29.5% v 94.7%; 95% confidence intervals, 11.2% to 50.7% v 68.1% to 99.2%; P < .0001 by log- rank test). The occurrence of overt leukemia in SCID mice was was a highly significant predictor of patient relapse. The estimated instantaneous risk of relapse for patients whose leukemic cells caused overt leukemia in SCID mice was 21.5-fold greater than that for the remaining patients. Thus, growth of human leukemic cells in SCID mice is a strong and independent predictor of relapse in patients with newly diagnosed high-risk B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia.


Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darja Koutova ◽  
Monika Kulhava ◽  
Radim Havelek ◽  
Martina Majorosova ◽  
Karel Královec ◽  
...  

Bersavine is the new bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from the Berberis vulgaris L. (Berberidaceae) plant. The results of cytotoxicity screening 48 h post-treatment showed that bersavine considerably inhibits the proliferation and viability of leukemic (Jurkat, MOLT-4), colon (HT-29), cervix (HeLa) and breast (MCF-7) cancer cells with IC50 values ranging from 8.1 to 11 µM. The viability and proliferation of leukemic Jurkat and MOLT-4 cells were decreased after bersavine treatment in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Bersavine manifested concentration-dependent antiproliferative activity in human lung, breast, ovarian and hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines using a xCELLigence assay. Significantly higher percentages of MOLT-4 cells exposed to bersavine at 20 µM for 24 h were arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle using the flow cytometry method. The higher percentage of apoptotic cells was measured after 24 h of bersavine treatment. The upregulation of p53 phosphorylated on Ser392 was detected during the progression of MOLT-4 cell apoptosis. Mechanistically, bersavine-induced apoptosis is an effect of increased activity of caspases, while reduced proliferation seems dependent on increased Chk1 Ser345 phosphorylation and decreased Rb Ser807/811 phosphorylation in human leukemic cells.


2000 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Mese ◽  
Akira Sasaki ◽  
Shuko Nakayama ◽  
Rafael E. Alcalde ◽  
Tomohiro Matsumura

2008 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 96-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laifa Hendarmin ◽  
Shintaro Kawano ◽  
Daigo Yoshiga ◽  
Ferry Sandra ◽  
Takeshi Mitsuyasu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1276-1276
Author(s):  
Hein Schepers ◽  
Marjan Geugien ◽  
Marco van der Toorn ◽  
Anton L. Bryantsev ◽  
Harm H. Kampinga ◽  
...  

Abstract In the present study, expression and function of Heat Shock Protein 27 (HSP27) was analyzed in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), since HSP27 expression is linked to unfavourable prognosis. HSP27 protein was predominantly expressed in monocytic blasts (M4-M5, 91%, N = 11) and absent in myeloid leukemic blasts (M1-M2, N = 5). A similar lineage restricted expression was observed in normal hematopoietic cells: high expression in normal CD34+ cells and monocytes, and absent in granulocytes. To study the functional role of HSP27, RNA interference (RNAi) studies were performed in the leukemic TF-1 cell line. These experiments demonstrated a twofold increase in VP-16-induced apoptosis after HSP27 siRNA. In contrast, CD95 Fas-induced apoptosis remained the same, as a result of CD95 Fas-mediated upregulation of HSP27. Additional investigations demonstrated that the increased VP-16-induced apoptosis after HSP27 RNAi, was associated with an enhanced phosphorylation of p38 and c-Jun. This VP-16-induced phosphorylation was subsequently followed by the release of cytochrome c into the cytoplasm, which increased twofold after siRNA treatment. These results indicate that HSP27 plays an important role in the protection against VP-16-induced apoptosis through the modulation of p38 and JNK activation, probably through interference with DAXX-mediated ASK1 activation. This was further underscored by co-immunoprecipitation studies, demonstrating complex formation of DAXX and HSP27 in an ASK1-dependent manner. However, in the investigated AML samples, VP-16-mediated apoptosis correlated moderately with HSP27 expression, although HSP27 was highly expressed and phosphorylated and activated in primitive monocytic AML blasts. This is likely due to the co-expression of p21Waf1/Cip1, which is in the majority of the monocytic AML M4-M5 blasts constitutively localised in the cytoplasm and interferes with apoptosis via the DAXX-ASK1-dependent pathway. Preliminary data indicate that overexpression of a cytoplasmic form of p21 is able to reduce the VP-16-induced apoptosis after RNAi for HSP27 as compared to controls, suggesting a predominant anti-apoptotic role of p21 over HSP27. In summary, we demonstrate a role for HSP27 in the survival of leukemic cells by modulation of the DAXX/p38/JNK apoptosis pathway. This survival advantage can further be promoted by the co-expression of cytoplasmic localised p21Waf1/Cip1 protein, indicating that strategies in AML treatment should be focused on targeting multiple signal transduction pathways.


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