Survival of Murine Leukemia Cells in Vivo after Irradiation in Vitro under Aerobic and Hypoxic Conditions with Monoenergetic Accelerated Charged Particles

1970 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger J. Berry
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jai-Sing Yang ◽  
Chia-Chun Wu ◽  
Chao-Lin Kuo ◽  
Yu-Hsuan Lan ◽  
Chin-Chung Yeh ◽  
...  

We investigated the molecular mechanisms of cell cycle arrest and apoptotic death induced bySolanum lyratumextracts (SLE) or diosgenin in WEHI-3 murine leukemia cellsin vitroand antitumor activityin vivo. Diosgenin is one of the components of SLE. Our study showed that SLE and diosgenin decreased the viable WEHI-3 cells and inducedG0/G1phase arrest and apoptosis in concentration- or time-dependent manners. Both reagents increased the levels of ROS production and decreased the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm). SLE- and diosgenin-triggered apoptosis is mediated through modulating the extrinsic and intrinsic signaling pathways. Intriguingly, the p53 inhibitor (pifithrin-α), anti-Fas ligand (FasL) mAb, and specific inhibitors of caspase-8 (z-IETD-fmk), caspase-9 (z-LEHD-fmk), and caspase-3 (z-DEVD-fmk) blocked SLE- and diosgenin-reduced cell viability of WEHI-3 cells. Thein vivostudy demonstrated that SLE has marked antitumor efficacy against tumors in the WEHI-3 cell allograft model. In conclusion, SLE- and diosgenin-inducedG0/G1phase arrest and triggered extrinsic and intrinsic apoptotic pathways via p53 activation in WEHI-3 cells. SLE also exhibited antitumor activityin vivo. Our findings showed that SLE may be potentially efficacious in the treatment of leukemia in the future.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 869-869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yao-Te Hsieh ◽  
Eugene Park ◽  
Enzi Jiang ◽  
Katrin Dauber ◽  
Doreen Chudziak ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 869 Despite the recent advances in chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), drug resistance resulting in relapse and long-term side effects of current treatments warrant new treatment modalities. Integrin α4β1 (VLA4/ITGA4/CD49d) mediates adhesion of hematopoietic cells onto bone marrow cells and has been implicated in cell adhesion-mediated drug resistance of leukemia cells. Gene expression analyses indicate that VLA4 is upregulated in B-lineage Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL). Therefore, we hypothesize that VLA4 might be a potential target for treatment of drug resistant ALL To test our hypothesis, we determined the effect of VLA4 inhibition on engraftment of primary pre-B ALLs using a humanized CD49d antibody, Tysabri, as a single agent in our NOD/SCID xenograft model of primary pre-B ALL. Tysabri is known to mobilize normal hematopoietic progenitor cells into the circulation. It blocks binding of VLA-4 to its counter receptors VCAM-1 and osteopontin and we have shown previously in a small pilot study that adjuvant administration with chemotherapy sensitizes one drug resistant primary ALL in vivo to drug treatment. In this study, we injected primary ALL cells from eight different donors into NOD/SCID mice. The samples encompass various cytogenetic aberrations (BCR-ABL, E2A-PBX, MLL-AF, normal karyotype). Cells were luciferase-transduced for in vivo cell tracking and pretreated in vitro with either Tysabri (n=3 per leukemia, n=24 total) or human Ig as a control (n=3 per leukemia, n=24 total). Recipients of Tysabri treated leukemias showed significantly prolonged median survival time (BCR-ABL: MST=112days, E2A-PBX: MST=83days, MLL-AF4: MST=51days; Normal karyotype: MST=48days) compared to control groups (BCR-ABL: MST=84days, E2A-PBX: MST=54days, MLL-AF4: MST=35days; Normal: MST=39days) (p<0.05). Therefore, engraftment of leukemia was significantly delayed in the Tysabri-treated groups as determined by bioluminescent imaging (p<0.05) and survival analysis (p<0.05). Next, we injected two luciferase-labeled pre-B ALLs (US7R, RS4;11) into NOD/SCID mice, which were then treated intraperitoneally with saline (US7R: n=4; RS4;11: n=3), Tysabri (US7R: n=4; RS4;11: n=3), VDL (Vincristine, Dexamethasone and L-Asparaginase) (US7R: n=9; RS4;11: n=5), or VDL+Tysabri (US7R: n=9; RS4;11: n=5), for 4 weeks. Tysabri-treated groups showed prolonged survival time (US7R: MST=52days; RS4;11: MST=83) compared with saline-treated groups (US7R: MST=38days; RS4;11: MST=60 days) (p=0.007). VDL-only treated animals died rapidly (US7R: MST=74days; RS4;11: MST=109 days), however, the animals treated with the combination VDL+ Tysabri, survived disease-free until the end of follow-up (US7R: MST=151days; RS4;11: MST=141 days) (p<0.0001). The sacrificed animals showed absence of human CD45 in spleen, liver, bone marrow and lung by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry indicating eradication of recalcitrant leukemia cells. We have also shown in vivo using an immunocompetent mouse model that VLA4 ablation does not result in dose-limiting toxicity to normal hematopoietic cells after VDL or 5-FU treatment. To understand further the role of VLA4 deletion in ALL, we established a model of murine leukemia using bone marrow cells from VLA4 floxed mice, retrovirally transformed with BCR-ABL1 p210 and cmyc. Subsequent to leukemic outgrowth, cells were transduced with either Empty GFP control, or Cre-GFP vector to delete VLA4. Knockout of VLA4 in transduced cells was detected by PCR on genomic DNA and by flow cytometry (Empty GFP control: 97% CD49+; Cre-GFP vector: 0.8% CD49+). Upon in vitro culturing of the cells 4-fold more VLA4 deleted cells were found in the supernatant compared to the control cells (p<0.05) determined by Trypan blue exclusion counts of dead cells, indicating that CD49d in murine leukemia is required for cell adhesion. Further functional studies addressing engraftment and gene expression upon induced VLA4 deletion are ongoing. Taken together, our data demonstrate that CD49d-blockade with adjuvant chemotherapy can eradicate chemotherapy-resistant leukemia. Further studies are warranted to understand and evaluate preclinically adjuvant inhibition of integrins to overcome relapse of leukemia. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 1615-1621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Andrade-Jorge ◽  
Marycarmen Godínez-Victoria ◽  
Luvia Enid Sánchez-Torres ◽  
Luis Humberto Fabila-Castillo ◽  
José G. Trujillo-Ferrara

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 30
Author(s):  
Shabir Hassan ◽  
Berivan Cecen ◽  
Ramon Peña-Garcia ◽  
Fernanda Roberta Marciano ◽  
Amir K. Miri ◽  
...  

Different strategies have been employed to provide adequate nutrients for engineered living tissues. These have mainly revolved around providing oxygen to alleviate the effects of chronic hypoxia or anoxia that result in necrosis or weak neovascularization, leading to failure of artificial tissue implants and hence poor clinical outcome. While different biomaterials have been used as oxygen generators for in vitro as well as in vivo applications, certain problems have hampered their wide application. Among these are the generation and the rate at which oxygen is produced together with the production of the reaction intermediates in the form of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Both these factors can be detrimental for cell survival and can severely affect the outcome of such studies. Here we present calcium peroxide (CPO) encapsulated in polycaprolactone as oxygen releasing microparticles (OMPs). While CPO releases oxygen upon hydrolysis, PCL encapsulation ensures that hydrolysis takes place slowly, thereby sustaining prolonged release of oxygen without the stress the bulk release can endow on the encapsulated cells. We used gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) hydrogels containing these OMPs to stimulate survival and proliferation of encapsulated skeletal myoblasts and optimized the OMP concentration for sustained oxygen delivery over more than a week. The oxygen releasing and delivery platform described in this study opens up opportunities for cell-based therapeutic approaches to treat diseases resulting from ischemic conditions and enhance survival of implants under severe hypoxic conditions for successful clinical translation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 199-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaobu Kobayashi ◽  
Jun Nishihara ◽  
Yoshihiro Fujii ◽  
Hiroshi Maeda ◽  
Masuo Hosokawa ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 758-758
Author(s):  
◽  
Fatima Al-Shahrour ◽  
Kimberly A. Hartwell ◽  
Lisa P Chu ◽  
Jaras Marcus ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 758 Primary leukemia stem cells (LSCs) reside in an in vivo microenvironment that supports the growth and survival of malignant cells. Despite the increasing understanding of the importance of niche interactions and primary cell biology in leukemia, many studies continue to focus on cell autonomous processes in artificial model systems. The majority of strategies to-date that attempt to define therapeutic targets in leukemia have relied on screening cell lines in culture; new strategies should incorporate the use of primary disease within a physiologic niche. Using a primary murine MLL-AF9 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) model highly enriched for LSCs, we performed an in vivo short hairpin RNA (shRNA) screen to identify novel genes that are essential for leukemia growth and survival. LSCs infected with pools of shRNA lentivirus were transplanted and grown in recipient mice for 2 weeks, after which bone marrow and spleen cells were isolated. Massively parallel sequencing of infected LSCs isolated before and after transplant was used to quantify the changes in shRNA representation over time. Our in vivo screens were highly sensitive, robust, and reproducible and identified a number of positive controls including genes required for MLL-AF9 transformation (Ctnnb1, Mef2c, Ccna1), genes universally required for cell survival (Ube2j2, Utp18), and genes required in other AML models (Myb, Pbx1, Hmgb3). In our primary and validation screens, multiple shRNAs targeting Integrin Beta 3 (Itgb3) were consistently depleted by more than 20-fold over two weeks in vivo. Follow up studies using RNA interference (RNAi) and Itgb3−/− mice identified Itgb3 as essential for murine leukemia cells growth and transformation in vivo, and loss of Itgb3 conferred a statistically significant survival advantage to recipient mice. Importantly, neither Itgb3 knockdown or genetic loss impaired normal hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) function in 16 week multilineage reconstitution assays. We further identified Itgav as the heterodimeric partner of Itgb3 in our model, and found that knockdown of Itgav inhibited leukemia cell growth in vivo. Consistent the therapeutic aims or our study, flow cytometry on primary human AML samples revealed ITGAV/ITGB3 heterodimer expression. To functionally assess the importance of gene expression in a human system, we performed another RNAi screen on M9 leukemia cells, primary human cord blood CD34+ cells transduced with MLL-ENL that are capable of growing in vitro or in a xenotransplant model in vivo. We found that ITGB3 loss inhibited M9 cell growth in vivo, but not in vitro, consistent with the importance of ITGB3 in a physiologic microenvironment. We explored the signaling pathways downstream of Itgb3 using an additional in vivo, unbiased shRNA screen and identified Syk as a critical mediator of Itgb3 activity in leukemia. Syk knockdown by RNAi inhibited leukemia cell growth in vivo; downregulation of Itgb3 expression resulted in decreased levels of Syk phosphorylation; and expression of an activated form of Syk, TEL-SYK, rescued the effects of Itgb3 knockdown on leukemia cell growth in vivo. To understand cellular processes controlled by Itgb3, we performed gene expression studies and found that, in leukemia cells, Itgb3 knockdown induced differentiation and inhibited multiple previously published LSC transcriptional programs. We confirmed these results using primary leukemia cell histology and a model system of leukemia differentiation. Finally, addition of a small molecule Syk inhibitor, R406, to primary cells co-cultured with bone marrow stroma caused a dose-dependent decrease in leukemia cell growth. Our results establish the significance of the Itgb3 signaling pathway, including Syk, as a potential therapeutic target in AML, and demonstrate the utility of in vivo RNA interference screens. Disclosures: Armstrong: Epizyme: Consultancy.


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