The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib induces rapid alterations of cell cycle regulators and augments sensitivity to cytostatic drugs in mantle cell lymphoma

2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (16_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6609-6609
Author(s):  
O. Weigert ◽  
M. Rieken ◽  
Y. Zimmermann ◽  
G. Hutter ◽  
M. Weinkauf ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 2287-2287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grit Hutter ◽  
Yvonne Zimmermann ◽  
Malte Rieken ◽  
Marc Weinkauf ◽  
Oliver Weigert ◽  
...  

Abstract Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a distinct subtype of malignant lymphoma with an especially poor clinical outcome, a median survival time of 3 years and virtually no long-term survivors. On the molecular level, MCL is characterized by the chromosomal translocation t(11;14)(q13;q32) resulting in the constitutive overexpression of cyclin D1. However, additional genetic alterations of cell cycle regulators, e.g. deletions of the INK4A gene cluster, are detectable in the majority of cases. In various phase II studies the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (Velcade) has demonstrated a high clinical efficacy with up to 60% remission rates in relapsed MCL. Additionally, in a previous in vitro study, the inhibitor induced a downregulation of cyclin D1 expression and a concomitant G(1) cell cycle arrest. However, little is known which molecules represent the critical targets of proteosome inhibition and how different regulators of cell cycle and apoptosis (inhibitors of CDK/INK4: p15INK4A, p16INK4B -and p14ARF and other kinase inhibitor proteins/KIP: 21CIP1, p27KIP1 and p57KIP2) are affected. 4 MCL cell lines (HBL2, GRANTA 519, Jeko-1, NCEB-1) and 2 hematological control cell lines (Jurkat, Karpas 422) were exposed to bortezomib at the minimal cytotoxic concentration (25 nmol) which corresponds to clinically achieved drug levels and results in a significant cytolysis after 48 – 72 hours. Real-time RT-PCR and protein expression levels of various CDK inhibitors (INK4s, KIPs) and cyclin D1 were determined a 0, 4, 8 and 12 hours after treatment with bortezomib. In addition, RNA- and protein expression data were compared to functional cell cycle phase (FACS) and cell apoptosis. Prelimenary data indicate that downregulation of cyclin D1 RNA expression after 12 and 24h of treatment represents a rather late event whereas alterations of other cell cycle regulators (like p21CIP1) were detected siginificantly earlier in all four MCL cell lines. Thus, expression of cell cycle regulators may indicate early events of proteasome inhibition. A comparative analysis of the cell cycle regulation network is currently being performed and will be presented at the conference.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2409-2409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Pastore ◽  
Malte Rieken ◽  
Oliver Weigert ◽  
Yvonne Zimmermann ◽  
Grit Hutter ◽  
...  

Abstract Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) displays an especially poor clinical outcome with only transient response to conventional chemotherapy, continuous relapses and a median survival of only 3 - 4 years. The Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is known to alter homeostasis of various oncogenes, transcription factors (e.g. NF-κB) regulators of cell cycle progression and apoptosis. In various phase II trials, proteasome inhibition with single agent bortezomib (Velcade®) achieved response rates of up to 60% in relapsed disease. Five MCL cell lines (HBL2, Granta 519, Jeko-1, NCEB-1 and Rec-1) and two hematological control cell lines (Jurkat, Karpas 422) were treated with bortezomib at a previously defined effective concentration (25 nM). Real-time RT-PCR and Western Blot analysis of cyclin D1 (CCND1), Cdk inhibitors (INK4s, KIPs), and other regulators of cell cycle and apoptosis were performed at various time points during bortezomib treatment (0 to 12 hours). Additionally, analyses of cell cycle were performed by flow cytometry. All cells lines were also exposed to different doses of bortezomib in combination with various cytostatic drugs, cell proliferation (WST-1 assay) and apoptosis (Annexin V PE/7-AAD staining) were analysed. After only 2 - 4 hours of bortezomib treatment analysis of relative RNA expression levels revealed downregulation of Cdk4 inhibitor p21CIP1, CCND1 and BCL2, thus representing early effects of proteasome inhibition in MCL cell lines. In contrast, CCND1 expression temporarily increased in cell lines with moderate sensitivity to bortezomib. Interaction between bortezomib and cytostatic drugs were evaluated applying the combination index (CI). Simultaneous exposure to bortezomib and various cytostatic drugs (cytarabine, mitoxantrone, fludarabine and gemcitabine) resulted in a significantly enhanced inhibition of proliferation and apoptosis. In order to investigate the interaction of cytostatic agents and bortezomib different incubation schedules were evelusated. Notably, pre-exposure to cytarabine and subsequent proteasome inhibition results in a strong synergism (CI = 0.5) that was not observed with prior bortezomib incubation. Interesting this pattern is chemotherapy specific, since bortezomib pre-incubation induced synergism with mitoxantrone (CI = 0.6). Finally, combination of cytarabine or gemcitabine with bortezomib was able to sensitize and inhibit cell proliferation of MCL cell lines resistant to single agent treatment. In summary, alteration of protein expression profiles and cell cycle regulators occur early after proteasome inhibition in MCL cell lines. In addition, combination of bortezomib with distinct cytostatic agents demonstrated a synergistic schedule dependent efficacy in vitro. Currently, confirmatory analyses of primary patient samples are being performed representing the rationale of a future randomized phase II/III study of the European MCL Network.


Oncogene ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (38) ◽  
pp. 5635-5642 ◽  
Author(s):  
I-W Park ◽  
M V R Reddy ◽  
E P Reddy ◽  
J E Groopman

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3184-3184
Author(s):  
Robert W. Chen ◽  
Lynne Bemis ◽  
Carol Amato ◽  
Birks Diane ◽  
Myint Han ◽  
...  

Abstract Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL) represents only 5–10% of all non-Hodgkins lymphomas, making it an uncommon but difficult form of lymphoma to treat. It has a poor prognosis among the B cell lymphomas with median survival of three years. The genetic hallmark of MCL is the t(11,14) translocation causing amplification of cyclin D1 (CCND1), a known cell cycle regulator which is overexpressed in many other cancers. MicroRNAs (miRNA) are a new class of abundant small RNAs that play important regulatory roles at the post transcriptional level. They act by binding to the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) of mRNAs and block either their translation or initiate their degradation. Recent reports have shown truncations in the CCND1 3′ UTR occur in MCL and indicate a worse prognosis. We hypothesized that truncations in 3′ UTR of CCND1 alter it’s regulation by microRNAs. Based on bioinformatics, we identified microRNA 16 with putative docking sites in the 3′UTR of CCND1. Mir-16 has been implicated as a cell cycle regulator. We identified 2 cell lines (Jeko-1 and Z138) with truncations in CCND1 3′ UTR and demonstrated increased CCND1 mRNA expression by qRT-PCR, increased protein expression by western blot, and higher proliferative potential by cell cycle. We prepared a reporter construct by ligating the full length 3′ UTR of CCND1 to GFP. We then co-transfected this construct with mimics of mir-16 into a cancer cell line and demonstrated downregulation of CCND1 protein expression by flow cytometry. In the MCL cell line Granta-519 with non-truncated CCND1, transfection with mimics of mir-16 deminstrated decreased expression of CCND1 mRNA. These studies suggest that the overexpression of CCDN1 In MCL may result from altered regulation of gene expression from loss of a miRNA regulatory site and may give new clues into the patho-biology of this disease and insights into possible new therapies.


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