Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: Correlations Between Oxidative Stress Metabolism and Cytogenetic Subgroups

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 4157-4157
Author(s):  
Felix Carbonell ◽  
Isabel Oliver ◽  
Rosa Collado ◽  
Carmen Tormos ◽  
Antonio Iradi ◽  
...  

Abstract The chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B cell-CLL) is a heterogeneous lymphoproliferative disorder susceptible to oxidative stress. The excessive production of reactive oxygen intermediates above the capability of naturally produced antioxidants may result in the instability of essential macromolecules, and represents the molecular basis of many diseases including cancer. Highly reactive radicals interact with DNA inducing a multitude of oxidative modifications, and are implicated in mutagenesis due to misreplication of the damaged base 8-oxo-2′-deoxiguanosine (8-oxo-dG). Furthermore, protooncogene activation and/or tumor suppressor gene inhibition has been reported as a consequence of oxygen radical-induced DNA modification. Even though their molecular alterations involving different genes as TP53 (17p13.1) and ATM (11q22-23) in B-cells CLL has been well established, the role of oxidative stress is still poorly understood and a matter of our interest. The aim of the present study was to analyze the correlations between oxidative stress status and the most common genetic subgroups in B-CLL. Patients and methods: We analyzed peripheral blood and urine from 86 untreated patients with B-CLL, and 39 normal controls. DNA damage was measured assessing the levels of 8-oxo-dG by HPLC-EC. Lipid peroxidation was studied quantifying the levels of malondialdehyde (MDA) and 8-isoprostane by HPLC-EC and enzyme immunoassay, respectively. The activities of antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) were examined by spectrophotometric methods; and the oxidative stress marker oxidized/reduced glutathione ratio (GSSG/GSH) was measured by HPLC. Genetic abnormalities were analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique with LSI D13S19, LSI ATM, LSI P53 and CEP 12 probes (Abbott Molecular Inc, Des Plaines, IL, USA). Results: With regard to antioxidant enzyme activities, there was a significantly decrease of SOD (range: 1.53–13.19 vs 11.88±3.25, p<0.001) and CAT (15.27–68.42 vs 47.15±16.45, p<0.05) levels in all B-CLL cytogenetic subgroups as compared with control subjects. On the contrary, GPx activity increased significantly among patients with del(13q) (31.22±16.53 vs 13.60±5.72, p<0.05). There was also a general increase of GSH (0.64–13.69 vs 0.45±0.51, p<0.001) and GSSG (14.41–67.47 vs 21.12±3.50, p<0.001) content in lymphocytes of CLL patients. As a consequence, the GSSG/GSH x 100 ratio (1.34–43.78 vs 1.95±1.94, p<0.001) increased indicating that the thiol redox status is elevated in CLL lymphocytes. In addition, there was an extensive lipid peroxidation as indicated by the increase of MDA and 8-isoprostane, especially among cases with ATM (MDA/8-isoprostane: 1.98±1.61/118.87±25.96 vs 0.21±0.10/74.64±33.94, p<0.001 and p<0.05) and TP53 (MDA: 2.09±0.78 vs 0.21±0.10, p<0.001) deletions. Finally, DNA damage was also enhanced in B-CLL. The mutagenic base 8-oxo-dG was found to be significantly increased in the lymphocytes DNA and urine of CLL patients (CLL lymphocytes: 13.20–92.64 vs 12.99±18.30, p<0.001 and urine 1.19–85.05 vs 7.43±2.63, p<0.001). Conclusion: Several oxidative stress parameters could relate to the prognostic role of some chromosomal abnormalities, as the favorable increase of GPx in patients with del(13q), the low oxidative damage among cases of trisomy 12, or the DNA and lipid deterioration of patients with ATM and TP53 deletions.

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. e0247776
Author(s):  
Ahmad Salimi ◽  
Elahe Baghal ◽  
Hassan Ghobadi ◽  
Niloufar Hashemidanesh ◽  
Farzad Khodaparast ◽  
...  

Acrylamide (AA), is an important contaminant formed during food processing under high temperature. Due to its potential neurotoxicity, reproductive toxicity, hepatotoxicity, immunotoxicity, genotoxicity and carcinogenicity effects, this food contaminant has been recognized as a human health concern. Previous studies showed that acrylamide-induced toxicity is associated with active metabolite of acrylamide by cytochrome P450 enzyme, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and DNA damage. In the current study, we investigated the role of oxidative stress in acrylamide’s genotoxicity and therapeutic potential role of ellagic acid (EA) in human lymphocytes. Human lymphocytes were simultaneously treated with different concentrations of EA (10, 25 and 50 μM) and acrylamide (50 μM) for 4 h at 37°C. After 4 hours of incubation, the toxicity parameters such cytotoxicity, ROS formation, oxidized/reduced glutathione (GSH/GSSG) content, malondialdehyde (MDA) level, lysosomal membrane integrity, mitochondria membrane potential (ΔΨm) collapse and 8-hydroxy-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) were analyzed using biochemical and flow cytometry evaluations. It has been found that acrylamide (50 μM) significantly increased cytotoxicity, ROS formation, GSH oxidation, lipid peroxidation, MMP collapse, lysosomal and DNA damage in human lymphocytes. On the other hand, cotreatment with EA (25 and 50 μM) inhibited AA-induced oxidative stress which subsequently led to decreasing of the cytotoxicity, GSH oxidation, lipid peroxidation, MMP collapse, lysosomal and DNA damage. Together, these results suggest that probably the co-exposure of EA with foods containing acrylamide could decrease mitochondrial, lysosomal and DNA damages, and oxidative stress induced by acrylamide in human body.


Open Biology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 200253
Author(s):  
Abdalla Elbialy

Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation mechanism for elimination and recycling of damaged intracellular organelles and proteins. Recent studies have shown that autophagy could help reduce oxidative stress by removing oxidized proteins and damaged mitochondria. Autophagy deficiency is associated with the disruption of many intracellular biological processes. Using bioinformatics tools and fibroblast immunostaining technology, I tried to investigate whether oxidative stress is involved in mediating the effect of autophagy suppression on certain cell biological processes and signalling pathways. Many pharmaceutical components have different modes of action to suppress autophagy. In this study, I performed analysis on autophagy suppression induced by neutralizing lysosomal pH (NH 4 Cl and bafilomycin A1). Bioinformatics analysis of GEO data, GSE60570 accession number, revealed that p38 signalling induction and DNA damage response are among the main disrupted signalling pathways in bafilomycin A1-treated RPE-1 cells. Likewise, fibroblast immunostaining showed that autophagy deficiency established by ammonium chloride (NH 4 Cl) has significantly increased P38 signalling, DNA damage marker (H2A.X), and oxidative stress marker (dityrosine). I therefore investigated the role of oxidative stress and whether antioxidants treatment could reverse autophagy suppression effects on p38 signalling and DNA damage response. Importantly, antioxidant treatment clearly restored P38 signalling and H2A.X levels in autophagy-suppressed fibroblast cells. Indicating that oxidative stress might be associated with the harmful effect of autophagy suppression.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amelia Maria Gaman ◽  
Ana-Maria Buga ◽  
Mihnea-Alexandru Gaman ◽  
Aurel Popa-Wagner

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by a predominant humoral immune deficiency predisposing the patients to infections. Oxidative stress leads to an increased immunoglobulin k light chain production in B cells and contributes to the antibodies’ deficiency and hypogammaglobulinemia.Aim of the Study. To evaluate the global oxidative status in patients with CLL and to determine whether the administration of antioxidants decreases complications due to infections.Patients and Method. We studied 84 patients with CLL stratified by Binet staging. Free oxygen radicals and antioxidant status were determined by the FORT and FORD test, respectively, at diagnosis and in the presence of infections. The patients were distributed in two groups: group A, treated only with antileukemic treatment, and group B, treated with antileukemic treatment and antioxidants.Results. By FORD and FORT assay, all patients had at diagnosis a low antioxidant capacity, and high levels of hydroperoxides. Infectious complications were more frequent in group A (B/C stages of disease) than in group B. Administrations of antioxidants stimulated the immune response and decreased infectious complications in CLL.Conclusions. Administrations of antioxidants and a healthy life style may improve the quality of life of patients with CLL and reduce the risk of infectious complications.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2911-2911
Author(s):  
Cecelia R Miller ◽  
Amy S. Ruppert ◽  
Kevin Coombes ◽  
Amy M. Lehman ◽  
James S. Blachly ◽  
...  

Abstract Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have emerged as important regulators of gene expression, and dysregulated expression of lncRNAs has been reported in many cancers. One of the most documented ways by which lncRNAs can contribute to cancer aggressiveness is by altering gene expression through associations with chromatin modifying proteins. However, the vast majority of lncRNAs dysregulated in cancer remain to be functionally characterized. Specifically, there have been few studies investigating the role of lncRNAs in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Numerous studies have been published documenting the role of micro RNAs (miRs) in CLL, indicating that non-coding RNAs can play a significant role in this disease. Therefore we hypothesize that dysregulated lncRNA expression in CLL contributes to aggressive disease. We performed microarray analysis using Arraystar Human LncRNA Array v2.0, a platform that analyzes over 30,000 lncRNA transcripts in addition to 30,000 coding transcripts. We found that many lncRNAs are aberrantly expressed in CLL compared to healthy donor B cells. We identified the lncRNA treRNA (TRERNA1) as overexpressed in CLL cells (p = .0014). treRNA has been previously described to have enhancer-like function (Ørom et al., 2010) as well as translational regulatory functions (Gummireddy et al., 2013). It has been reported as overexpressed in breast cancer lymph-node metastases and colon cancer (Gummireddy et al., 2013). In addition to expressing spliced treRNA, CLL cells contain a transcript that retains the intron between the two coding exons due to insufficient splicing. Therefore we investigated the prognostic significance of both spliced and retained intron treRNA (ri-treRNA) in subsequent studies. We obtained 144 well-characterized CLL patient samples from the CLL Research Consortium (CRC) and measured transcript expression by quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR). We separated patients into high or low expressers of treRNA relative to the overall median expression and found that patients with higher expression of treRNA have significantly shorter time to treatment (p = .04). High expression of treRNA also correlates with the poor prognostic indicators unmutated IGHV (p < .0001) and low ZAP70 methylation (p <.001). We validated the correlation with unmutated IGHV in a second cohort of 147 previously untreated CLL samples collected prior to starting therapy in a clinical trial (E2997; Grever et al., 2007) comparing fludarabine to the combination of fludarabine plus cyclophosphamide (FC). We found that high expression (relative to the median) of spliced, but not ri-treRNA, independently predicts for shorter progression free survival in patients receiving FC (HR 3.14, 95% CI 1.61-6.14, p < .001). Since the data from this clinical study suggests a role for treRNA in mediating DNA damage response, we established a stable retroviral system to further study this observation in vitro. We used the CLL cell line established in our lab (OSUCLL; Hertlein et al., 2013) to express empty vector or treRNA. Expression of treRNA does not alter viability, proliferation, or migration. However, OSUCLL expressing treRNA display modest resistance to FC treatment. This correlates with less induction of the DNA damage indicator, γH2AX, as well as the DNA damage response protein, TP53, although these changes were not statistically significant. Consistent with the clinical data, ri-treRNA did not show a differential response to in vitro FC treatment. In summary, we have identified a lncRNA in CLL which may play a role in DNA damage response, and serve as a biomarker predictive of aggressive disease. Disclosures Flinn: Celgene Corporation: Research Funding.


Author(s):  
R. G. Hamza ◽  
A.N. El Shahat ◽  
M.N. Al-seeni

This study aimed to investigate the antioxidant role of dried mushroom (DM) against hazards of gamma-irradiation in male rats. In this study, exposure of rats to whole body g-radiation (6 Gy) resulted in hepatic oxidative stress (a significant increase in lipid peroxidation concomitant with a significant decrease in glutathione content and antioxidant enzyme activities); increase liver function enzymes and histopathological disorders. Treatment of irradiated rats with 10% DM significantly improved radiation-induced injury as indicated by the reduction of the indices of liver damage, lipid peroxidation product, the elevation of antioxidants and the attenuation of the tissues histological architecture. These results suggest that oyster mushroom can improve the antioxidant status and minimize the occurrence of oxidative stress- associated disorders.


Blood Reviews ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 183-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Gahrton ◽  
G. Juliusson ◽  
K.-H. Robèrt ◽  
K. Friberg

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosa Collado ◽  
David Ivars ◽  
Isabel Oliver ◽  
Carmen Tormos ◽  
Mercedes Egea ◽  
...  

Oxidative stress contributes to genomic instability in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), but its relationship with the acquisition of specific chromosomal abnormalities is unknown. We recruited 55 untreated CLL patients and assessed 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxo-dG), glutathione, and malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, and we compared them among the cytogenetic subgroups established using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Significant increases in 8-oxo-dG and/or MDA were observed in patients with unfavorable cytogenetic aberrations (17p and 11q deletions) compared to the 13q deletion group.TP53deletion patients exhibited a diminished DNA repair efficiency. Finally, cases with normal FISH also showed enhanced 8-oxo-dG, which could result in adverse outcomes.


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