scholarly journals Ginsenoside Rg1 Inhibits Cell Proliferation and Induces Markers of Cell Senescence in CD34+CD38– Leukemia Stem Cells Derived from KG1α Acute Myeloid Leukemia Cells by Activating the Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1)/Tuberous Sclerosis Complex 2 (TSC2) Signaling Pathway

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan-Long Tang ◽  
Cheng-Gui Zhang ◽  
Heng Liu ◽  
Yue Zhou ◽  
Ya-Ping Wang ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3368-3368
Author(s):  
Tae Kon Kim ◽  
Martin Carroll ◽  
Alan M. Gewirtz

Abstract Signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) family proteins play crucial roles in the cytokine signaling pathways which regulate survival and proliferation of normal and malignant hematopoietic cells. The STAT proteins which regulate myeloid leukemia cell survival and proliferation remain ill defined. STAT3, for example, has been reported to be constitutively activated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells but its function in these cells is not clear. In order to better understand the role of STAT3 in AML biology, we studied its expression, activation, and requirement for cell growth in several AML cell lines, and in primary patient material. We first confirmed the activation of STAT3 in primary AML cells by western blotting. An analysis of 5 AML patient samples revealed elevated levels of constitutive STAT3 phosphorylation in 4 of 5 samples. In addition, two AML cell lines (MOLM-14, KG-1) displayed constitutive STAT3 activation. In order to evalute the functional significance of STAT3 overexpression in AML cells, we synthesized a siRNA that had been reported effective in silencing STAT3 expression. The siRNA were delivered to MOLM-14 cells using an amaxa nucleoporation device (amaxa, Inc. Gaithersburg, MD) (Program O-17/Solution V). In treated cells, STAT3 expression decreased 72%±1% [n=5] but in a non-dose related manner suggesting that “off-target” gene silencing, or other mechanisms unrelated to target gene silencing might have played a role squelching STAT3 expression. In contrast, nucleofection of MOLM-14 cells with an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (AS ODN) corresponding to the antisense sequence of the siRNA duplex, decreased STAT3 expression 96%±1% [n=5] compared to control treated cells. Importantly, inhibition was dose dependent and sequence specific. Cell proliferation was also inhibited in the AS ODN treated cells (82%±7% at 24 hour, 92%±2% at 48 hour, 91%±4% at 72 hour [n=3]) in comparison to control treated cells. To determine if these results were unique to a specific cell line, we nucleofected AS ODN into KG-1 cells (amaxa, Program T-27/Solution V). Again, the AS ODN decreased STAT3 expression 90% compared to control treated cells and inhibited cell proliferation in a manner similar to that obtained for MOLM-14 cells (72% at 24 hour, 78% at 48 hour, 79% at 72 hour) in comparison to control treated cells. To determine if STAT3 is necessary for survival of primary AML cells, cells from 5 patients (four frozen leukapheresis samples-FAB Classification M1, M4, M4, M5, one fresh peripheral blood sample-FAB Classification M5) were nucleofected (amaxa, Program U-15/Solution V) with the STAT3 AS or control ODN and incubated on the EBM-2(Endothelial Basal Medium, CABREX®) for 72 hours. Primary AML cells treated with STAT3 AS ODN showed a ~50–80% decrease in survival compared to control ODN treated cells. These results demonstrate that STAT3 plays an important role in the survival and proliferation of acute myeloid leukemia cells. Accordingly, STAT3 appears to be a legitimate target for the treatment of AML. These results also demonstrate that an effectively delivered, appropriately targeted, AS ODN has the ability to silence its targeted gene’s expression with a specificity and an efficiency equivalent to, or in some cases better, than any highly active siRNA.


Author(s):  
Mishary G. Musalli ◽  
Mohammed A. Hassan ◽  
Ryan A. Sheikh ◽  
Abdulaziz A. Kalantan ◽  
Majed A. Halwani ◽  
...  

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive and heterogeneous disease characterized by an abnormal proliferation and impaired differentiation of the myeloid precursor cells. The outcome for most AML patients remains poor with high relapse rates and chemotherapy remains the first line treatment for AML. The Wilms tumor wt1 and the anti-apoptotic BCL2 genes are upregulated in AML and are known to be involved in apoptosis inhibition. In the present study we evaluated the molecular mechanisms underlie the anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic activities exerted by thymoquinone (TQ), the major biologically active compound of the black seed oil on acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell line-HL60. Cell proliferation was determined by WST-1 assay and apoptosis rate was assessed by flow cytometry using annexin-V/7AAD staining. The expression of target genes was analyzed by real-time RT–PCR analysis. TQ significantly reduced HL60 cell viability and induced apoptosis in a dose and time-dependent manner. In order to decipher the molecular mechanisms underlie the anti-cancer activities induced by TQ in AML cells, we investigated its effect on the expression of WT1 and BCL2 genes. TQ significantly decreased the expression of WT1 and BCL2 genes in a dose and time-dependent manner. In summary, these findings suggest that TQ induces cell proliferation inhibition and apoptosis in acute myeloid leukemia cells most likely through targeting the apoptosis-related WT1 and BCL2 genes and also suggest that TQ could be a promising strategy for AML therapy.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3906-3906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleksandr Galkin ◽  
Jessica McLeod ◽  
James A Kennedy ◽  
Liqing Jin ◽  
Nathan Mbong ◽  
...  

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive hematologic malignancy and is the most common type of acute leukemia in adults. Although a majority of patients achieve remission following cytotoxic chemotherapy, most will relapse and ultimately die. Therapy resistance and relapse are driven by leukemia stem cells (LSC). Evidence of genetic and functional heterogeneity in the LSC compartment underscores the importance of developing therapeutic strategies that will target all subclones effectively. We previously showed that LSCs in AML depend on CD47-SIRPα interaction to evade immune surveillance (Theocharides et al, JEM 2012). CD47 acts as a "do not eat me" signal that binds to the inhibitory receptor SIRPα on macrophages and masks cancer cells from macrophage-mediated phagocytosis. TTI-621 (Trillium Therapeutics Inc., Ontario, Canada) is a human SIRPαFc protein formed by fusing the IgV doman of human SIRPα to a human IgG1-Fc moiety; it is designed to bind CD47 on leukemia cells and disrupt its interaction with SIRPα on host macrophages. Our previous studies in AML cell lines and a small number of primary AML samples demonstrated increased phagocytosis in vitro and decreased engraftment in xenotransplant models following SIRPαFc treatment (Theocharides et al, JEM 2012, Petrova et al, Clin Cancer Res 2017). Here, we tested the efficacy of TTI-621 against a broad panel of primary AML samples in xenotransplantation models to determine efficacy and response rates in this heterogeneous disease. Bulk cells obtained from the peripheral blood of 30 AML patients representing a broad range of cytogenetic and molecular subtypes were transplanted intrafemorally into sublethally-irradiated NSG mice. After a 2-week engraftment period, mice were treated with either SIRPαFc or control IgG by intraperitoneal injection 3×/week for 4 weeks, following which leukemic engraftment was determined by flow cytometry. In all but 1 sample, a significant reduction in AML engraftment was seen in SIRPαFc-treated mice compared to controls. For 23 samples defined as good responders, SIRPαFc treatment resulted in 91% (range 53-100%, p<0.0001) and 98% (range 88-100%, p<0.0001) reduction of leukemic engraftment in the injected femur and in non-injected bones, respectively, compared to controls. Six samples demonstrated a lesser response that was largely observed in the non-injected bones, with relative reduction of 69% (range 43-93%, p=0.03); these samples were defined as partial responders. The majority of samples from patients with unfavorable features such as age >60, adverse cytogenetic risk, and secondary AML, as well as samples obtained from relapsed/resistant patients, were classified as good responders. Notably, 20 of 23 good responders had a high LSC17 score, which we have shown is associated with poor initial therapy response and short survival following standard treatments (Ng et al, Nature 2016). To determine whether SIRPαFc treatment killed LSCs, we transplanted leukemia cells harvested from primary treated mice into untreated secondary recipients at limiting dilution. For four independent samples, including three partial responders and the one non-responder, we observed a significantly lower LSC frequency (3.9-10.3 fold, p=0.002-0.024) in mice transplanted with SIRPαFc-treated cells compared to controls, indicating that SIRPαFc treatment reduced LSC numbers in primary mice, despite partial or no reduction of bulk disease. Our data demonstrate that SIRPαFc effectively targets LSCs in a human AML xenotransplantion model with high response rates across a heterogeneous cohort of primary AML samples, including samples with unfavorable risk features. SIRPαFc may be most effective in the remission setting as maintenance therapy for patients with detectable residual disease, to eradicate residual LSCs and prevent relapse. Disclosures Jin: Trillium Therapeutics: Other: licensing agreement. Wong:Trillium Therapetuics: Employment. Uger:Trillium Therapetuics: Employment. Minden:Trillium Therapetuics: Other: licensing agreement. Danska:Trillium Therapeutics: Other: licensing agreement, Research Funding. Wang:Pfizer AG Switzerland: Honoraria, Other: Travel and accommodation; Pfizer International: Honoraria, Other: Travel and accommodation; Trilium therapeutics: Other: licensing agreement, Research Funding; NanoString: Other: Travel and accommodation.


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