AI Article Synopsis

  • Richter's syndrome (RS) is a severe form of cancer resulting from the evolution of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) into a high-grade B-cell malignancy, characterized by decreased reliance on BCL-2, a key protein that prevents apoptosis (cell death).
  • Studies comparing CLL and RS revealed that RS cells display lower apoptotic priming and may depend on different anti-apoptotic proteins, complicating treatment strategies like using BH3 mimetics that target cell death pathways.
  • Transcriptomic analyses showed that as CLL transforms into RS, there is a downregulation of pro-apoptotic factors and changes in mitochondrial structure that contribute to enhanced resistance to apoptosis, making it harder to target RS directly.

Article Abstract

Richter's syndrome (RS) is the transformation of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) into a high-grade B-cell malignancy. Molecular and functional studies have pointed out that CLL cells are close to the apoptotic threshold and dependent on BCL-2 for survival. However, it remains undefined how evasion from apoptosis evolves during disease transformation. Here, we employed functional and static approaches to compare the regulation of mitochondrial apoptosis in CLL and RS. BH3 profiling of 17 CLL and 9 RS samples demonstrated that RS cells had reduced apoptotic priming and lower BCL-2 dependence than CLL cells. While a subset of RS was dependent on alternative anti-apoptotic proteins and was sensitive to specific BH3 mimetics, other RS cases harbored no specific anti-apoptotic addiction. Transcriptomics of paired CLL/RS samples revealed downregulation of pro-apoptotic sensitizers during disease transformation. Albeit expressed, effector and activator members were less likely to colocalize with mitochondria in RS compared to CLL. Electron microscopy highlighted reduced cristae width in RS mitochondria, a condition further promoting apoptosis resistance. Collectively, our data suggest that RS cells evolve multiple mechanisms that lower the apoptotic priming and shift the anti-apoptotic dependencies away from BCL-2, making direct targeting of mitochondrial apoptosis more challenging after disease transformation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11082225PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-024-06707-5DOI Listing

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