AI Article Synopsis

  • The t(8;21) chromosomal translocation is the most frequent alteration in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and produces the AML1-ETO (AE) fusion protein, which shows promise as a treatment target, but its expression alone isn't enough to drive leukemia.
  • Silencing AE in AML cells significantly lowers growth rates through apoptosis and disruptions in the cell cycle, while also decreasing levels of the KIT gene, which affects growth but doesn’t trigger cell death.
  • Further analysis of AML cells that survive AE suppression indicates that the ERK2 protein plays a critical role in activating pathways that help these cells resist treatment, highlighting it as a potential target for overcoming resistance.

Article Abstract

The t(8;21)(q22;q22) rearrangement represents the most common chromosomal translocation in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). It results in a transcript encoding for the fusion protein AML1-ETO (AE) with transcription factor activity. AE is considered to be an attractive target for treating t(8;21) leukemia. However, AE expression alone is insufficient to cause transformation, and thus the potential of such therapy remains unclear. Several genes are deregulated in AML cells, including KIT that encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor. Here, we show that AML cells transduced with short hairpin RNA vector targeting AE mRNAs have a dramatic decrease in growth rate that is caused by induction of apoptosis and deregulation of the cell cycle. A reduction in KIT mRNA levels was also observed in AE-silenced cells, but silencing KIT expression reduced cell growth but did not induce apoptosis. Transcription profiling of cells that escape cell death revealed activation of a number of signaling pathways involved in cell survival and proliferation. In particular, we find that the extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2; also known as mitogen-activated protein kinase 1 (MAPK1)) protein could mediate activation of 23 out of 29 (79%) of these upregulated pathways and thus may be regarded as the key player in establishing the t(8;21)-positive leukemic cells resistant to AE suppression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/leu.2014.130DOI Listing

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