SDX-308, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, inhibits NF-kappaB activity, resulting in strong inhibition of osteoclast formation/activity and multiple myeloma cell growth.
Multiple myeloma is characterized by increased osteoclast activity that results in bone destruction and lytic lesions. With the prolonged overall patient survival achieved by new treatment modalities,additional drugs are required to inhibit bone destruction. We focused on a novel and more potent structural analog of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug etodolac,known as SDX-308,and its effects on osteoclastogenesis and multiple myeloma cells. SDX-101 is another structural analog of etodolac that is already used in clinical trials for the treatment of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). Compared with SDX-101,a 10-fold lower concentration of SDX-308 induced potent (60%-80%) inhibition of osteoclast formation,and a 10- to 100-fold lower concentration inhibited multiple myeloma cell proliferation. Bone resorption was completely inhibited by SDX-308,as determined in dentin-based bone resorption assays. SDX-308 decreased constitutive and RANKL-stimulated NF-kappaB activation and osteoclast formation in an osteoclast cellular model,RAW 264.7. SDX-308 effectively suppressed TNF-alpha-induced IKK-gamma and IkappaB-alpha phosphorylation and degradation and subsequent NF-kappaB activation in human multiple myeloma cells. These results indicate that SDX-308 effectively inhibits multiple myeloma cell proliferation and osteoclast activity,potentially by controlling NF-kappaB activation signaling. We propose that SDX-308 is a promising therapeutic candidate to inhibit multiple myeloma growth and osteoclast activity and that it should receive attention for further study.
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Bruserud &O et al. (MAR 2007)
Haematologica 92 3 332--41
Subclassification of patients with acute myelogenous leukemia based on chemokine responsiveness and constitutive chemokine release by their leukemic cells.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Chemokines are soluble mediators involved in angiogenesis,cellular growth control and immunomodulation. In the present study we investigated the effects of various chemokines on proliferation of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cells and constitutive chemokine release by primary AML cells. DESIGN AND METHODS: Native human AML cells derived from 68 consecutive patients were cultured in vitro. We investigated AML cell proliferation (3H-thymidine incorporation,colony formation),chemokine receptor expression,constitutive chemokine release and chemotaxis of normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells. RESULTS: Exogenous chemokines usually did not have any effect on AML blast proliferation in the absence of hematopoietic growth factors,but when investigating growth factor-dependent (interleukin 3 + granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor + stem cell factor) proliferation in suspension cultures the following patient subsets were identified: (i) patients whose cells showed chemokine-induced growth enhancement (8 patients); (ii) divergent effects on proliferation (15 patients); and (iii) no effect (most patients). These patient subsets did not differ in chemokine receptor expression,but,compared to CD34- AML cells,CD34+ cells showed higher expression of several receptors. Chemokines also increased the proliferation of clonogenic AML cells from the first subset of patients. Furthermore,a broad constitutive chemokine release profile was detected for most patients,and the following chemokine clusters could be identified: CCL2-4/CXCL1/8,CCL5/CXCL9-11 (possibly also CCL23) and CCL13/17/22/24/CXCL5 (possibly also CXCL6). Only the CCL2-4/CXCL1/8 cluster showed significant correlations between corresponding mRNA levels and NFkB levels/activation. The chemotaxis of normal immunocompetent cells for patients without constitutive chemokine release was observed to be decreased. INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: Differences in chemokine responsiveness as well as chemokine release contribute to patient heterogeneity in AML. Patients with AML can be classified into distinct subsets according to their chemokine responsiveness and chemokine release profile.
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Goel A et al. (MAY 2006)
Blood 107 10 4063--70
Synergistic activity of the proteasome inhibitor PS-341 with non-myeloablative 153-Sm-EDTMP skeletally targeted radiotherapy in an orthotopic model of multiple myeloma.
Multiple myeloma is a highly radiosensitive skeletal malignancy,but bone-seeking radionuclides have not yet found their place in disease management. We previously reported that the proteasome inhibitor PS-341 selectively sensitizes myeloma cells to the lethal effects of ionizing radiation. To extend these observations to an in vivo model,we combined PS-341 with the bone-seeking radionuclide 153-Sm-EDTMP. In vitro clonogenic assays demonstrated synergistic killing of myeloma cells exposed to both PS-341 and 153-Sm-EDTMP. Using the orthotopic,syngeneic 5TGM1 myeloma model,the median survivals of mice treated with saline,2 doses of PS-341 (0.5 mg/kg),or a single nonmyeloablative dose of 153-Sm-EDTMP (22.5 MBq) were 21,22,and 28 days,respectively. In contrast,mice treated with combination therapy comprising 2 doses of PS-341 (0.5 mg/kg),1 day prior to and 1 day following 153-Sm-EDTMP (22.5 MBq) showed a significantly prolonged median survival of 49 days (P textless .001). In addition to prolonged survival,this treatment combination yielded reduced clonogenicity of bone marrow-resident 5TGM1 cells,reduced serum myeloma-associated paraprotein levels,and better preservation of bone mineral density. Myelosuppression,determined by peripheral blood cell counts and clonogenicity assays of hematopoietic progenitors,did not differ between animals treated with 153-Sm-EDTMP alone versus those treated with the combination of PS-341 plus 153-Sm-EDTMP. PS-341 is a potent,selective in vivo radiosensitizer that may substantially affect the efficacy of skeletal-targeted radiotherapy in multiple myeloma.
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Morrow M et al. (MAY 2004)
Blood 103 10 3890--6
TEL-AML1 promotes development of specific hematopoietic lineages consistent with preleukemic activity.
The t(12;21)(p13;q22) translocation is the most common chromosomal abnormality yet identified in any pediatric leukemia and gives rise to the TEL-AML1 fusion product. To investigate the effects of TEL-AML1 on hematopoiesis,fetal liver hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) were transduced with retroviral vectors expressing this fusion protein. We show that TEL-AML1 dramatically alters differentiation of HPCs in vitro,preferentially promoting B-lymphocyte development,enhancing self-renewal of B-cell precursors,and leading to the establishment of long-term growth factor-dependent pre-B-cell lines. However,it had no effect on myeloid development in vitro. Further experiments were performed to determine whether TEL-AML1 also demonstrates lineage-specific activity in vivo. TEL-AML1-expressing HPCs displayed a competitive advantage in reconstituting both B-cell and myeloid lineages in vivo but had no effect on reconstitution of the T-cell lineage. Despite promoting these alterations in hematopoiesis,TEL-AML1 did not induce leukemia in transplanted mice. Our study provides a unique insight into the role of TEL-AML1 in leukemia predisposition and a potential model to study the mechanism of leukemogenesis associated with this fusion.
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Mortensen M et al. (MAR 2011)
The Journal of experimental medicine 208 3 455--67
The autophagy protein Atg7 is essential for hematopoietic stem cell maintenance.
The role of autophagy,a lysosomal degradation pathway which prevents cellular damage,in the maintenance of adult mouse hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) remains unknown. Although normal HSCs sustain life-long hematopoiesis,malignant transformation of HSCs leads to leukemia. Therefore,mechanisms protecting HSCs from cellular damage are essential to prevent hematopoietic malignancies. In this study,we crippled autophagy in HSCs by conditionally deleting the essential autophagy gene Atg7 in the hematopoietic system. This resulted in the loss of normal HSC functions,a severe myeloproliferation,and death of the mice within weeks. The hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell compartment displayed an accumulation of mitochondria and reactive oxygen species,as well as increased proliferation and DNA damage. HSCs within the Lin(-)Sca-1(+)c-Kit(+) (LSK) compartment were significantly reduced. Although the overall LSK compartment was expanded,Atg7-deficient LSK cells failed to reconstitute the hematopoietic system of lethally irradiated mice. Consistent with loss of HSC functions,the production of both lymphoid and myeloid progenitors was impaired in the absence of Atg7. Collectively,these data show that Atg7 is an essential regulator of adult HSC maintenance.
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Thacker SG et al. (OCT 2010)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 185 7 4457--69
The detrimental effects of IFN-α on vasculogenesis in lupus are mediated by repression of IL-1 pathways: potential role in atherogenesis and renal vascular rarefaction.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is characterized by increased vascular risk due to premature atherosclerosis independent of traditional risk factors. We previously proposed that IFN-α plays a crucial role in premature vascular damage in SLE. IFN-α alters the balance between endothelial cell apoptosis and vascular repair mediated by endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) and myeloid circulating angiogenic cells (CACs). In this study,we demonstrate that IFN-α promotes an antiangiogenic signature in SLE and control EPCs/CACs,characterized by transcriptional repression of IL-1α and β,IL-1R1,and vascular endothelial growth factor A,and upregulation of IL-1R antagonist and the decoy receptor IL-1R2. IL-1β promotes significant improvement in the functional capacity of lupus EPCs/CACs,therefore abrogating the deleterious effects of IFN-α. The beneficial effects from IL-1 are mediated,at least in part,by increases in EPC/CAC proliferation,by decreases in EPC/CAC apoptosis,and by preventing the skewing of CACs toward nonangiogenic pathways. IFN-α induces STAT2 and 6 phosphorylation in EPCs/CACs,and JAK inhibition abrogates the transcriptional antiangiogenic changes induced by IFN-α in these cells. Immunohistochemistry of renal biopsies from patients with lupus nephritis,but not anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic Ab-positive vasculitis,showed this pathway to be operational in vivo,with increased IL-1R antagonist,downregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor A,and glomerular and blood vessel decreased capillary density,compared with controls. Our study introduces a novel putative pathway by which type I IFNs may interfere with vascular repair in SLE through repression of IL-1-dependent pathways. This could promote atherosclerosis and loss of renal function in this disease.
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Uhmann A et al. (SEP 2007)
Blood 110 6 1814--23
The Hedgehog receptor Patched controls lymphoid lineage commitment.
A first step in hematopoiesis is the specification of the lymphoid and myeloid lineages from multipotent progenitor cells in the bone marrow. Using a conditional ablation strategy in adult mice,we show that this differentiation step requires Patched (Ptch),the cell surface-bound receptor for Hedgehog (Hh). In the absence of Ptch,the development of T- and B-lymphoid lineages is blocked at the level of the common lymphoid progenitor in the bone marrow. Consequently,the generation of peripheral T and B cells is abrogated. Cells of the myeloid lineage develop normally in Ptch mutant mice. Finally,adoptive transfer experiments identified the stromal cell compartment as a critical Ptch-dependent inducer of lymphoid versus myeloid lineage commitment. Our data show that Ptch acts as a master switch for proper diversification of hematopoietic stem cells in the adult organism.
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Jamieson CHM et al. (APR 2006)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 16 6224--9
The JAK2 V617F mutation occurs in hematopoietic stem cells in polycythemia vera and predisposes toward erythroid differentiation.
Although a large proportion of patients with polycythemia vera (PV) harbor a valine-to-phenylalanine mutation at amino acid 617 (V617F) in the JAK2 signaling molecule,the stage of hematopoiesis at which the mutation arises is unknown. Here we isolated and characterized hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and myeloid progenitors from 16 PV patient samples and 14 normal individuals,testing whether the JAK2 mutation could be found at the level of stem or progenitor cells and whether the JAK2 V617F-positive cells had altered differentiation potential. In all PV samples analyzed,there were increased numbers of cells with a HSC phenotype (CD34+CD38-CD90+Lin-) compared with normal samples. Hematopoietic progenitor assays demonstrated that the differentiation potential of PV was already skewed toward the erythroid lineage at the HSC level. The JAK2 V617F mutation was detectable within HSC and their progeny in PV. Moreover,the aberrant erythroid potential of PV HSC was potently inhibited with a JAK2 inhibitor,AG490.
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Schü et al. (MAY 2008)
Blood 111 9 4532--41
The MADS transcription factor Mef2c is a pivotal modulator of myeloid cell fate.
Mef2c is a MADS (MCM1-agamous-deficient serum response factor) transcription factor best known for its role in muscle and cardiovascular development. A causal role of up-regulated MEF2C expression in myelomonocytic acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has recently been demonstrated. Due to the pronounced monocytic component observed in Mef2c-induced AML,this study was designed to assess the importance of Mef2c in normal myeloid differentiation. Analysis of bone marrow (BM) cells manipulated to constitutively express Mef2c demonstrated increased monopoiesis at the expense of granulopoiesis,whereas BM isolated from Mef2c(Delta/-) mice showed reduced levels of monocytic differentiation in response to cytokines. Mechanistic studies showed that loss of Mef2c expression correlated with reduced levels of transcripts encoding c-Jun,but not PU.1,C/EBPalpha,or JunB transcription factors. Inhibiting Jun expression by short-interfering RNA impaired Mef2c-mediated inhibition of granulocyte development. Moreover,retroviral expression of c-Jun in BM cells promoted monocytic differentiation. The ability of Mef2c to modulate cell-fate decisions between monocyte and granulocyte differentiation,coupled with its functional sensitivity to extracellular stimuli,demonstrate an important role in immunity--and,consistent with findings of other myeloid transcription factors,a target of oncogenic lesions in AML.
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van Rhenen A et al. (OCT 2007)
Blood 110 7 2659--66
The novel AML stem cell associated antigen CLL-1 aids in discrimination between normal and leukemic stem cells.
In CD34(+) acute myeloid leukemia (AML),the malignant stem cells reside in the CD38(-) compartment. We have shown before that the frequency of such CD34(+)CD38(-) cells at diagnosis correlates with minimal residual disease (MRD) frequency after chemotherapy and with survival. Specific targeting of CD34(+)CD38(-) cells might thus offer therapeutic options. Previously,we found that C-type lectin-like molecule-1 (CLL-1) has high expression on the whole blast compartment in the majority of AML cases. We now show that CLL-1 expression is also present on the CD34(+)CD38(-) stem- cell compartment in AML (77/89 patients). The CD34(+)CLL-1(+) population,containing the CD34(+)CD38(-)CLL-1(+) cells,does engraft in nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice with outgrowth to CLL-1(+) blasts. CLL-1 expression was not different between diagnosis and relapse (n = 9). In remission,both CLL-1(-) normal and CLL-1(+) malignant CD34(+)CD38(-) cells were present. A high CLL-1(+) fraction was associated with quick relapse. CLL-1 expression is completely absent both on CD34(+)CD38(-) cells in normal (n = 11) and in regenerating bone marrow controls (n = 6). This AML stem-cell specificity of the anti-CLL-1 antibody under all conditions of disease and the leukemia-initiating properties of CD34(+)CLL-1(+) cells indicate that anti-CLL-1 antibody enables both AML-specific stem-cell detection and possibly antigen-targeting in future.
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Ragu C et al. (NOV 2010)
Blood 116 22 4464--73
The transcription factor Srf regulates hematopoietic stem cell adhesion.
Adhesion properties of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the bone marrow (BM) niches control their migration and affect their cell-cycle dynamics. The serum response factor (Srf) regulates growth factor-inducible genes and genes controlling cytoskeleton structures involved in cell spreading,adhesion,and migration. We identified a role for Srf in HSC adhesion and steady-state hematopoiesis. Conditional deletion of Srf in BM cells resulted in a 3-fold expansion of the long- and short-term HSCs and multipotent progenitors (MPPs),which occurs without long-term modification of cell-cycle dynamics. Early differentiation steps to myeloid and lymphoid lineages were normal,but Srf loss results in alterations in mature-cell production and severe thrombocytopenia. Srf-null BM cells also displayed compromised engraftment properties in transplantation assays. Gene expression analysis identified Srf target genes expressed in HSCs,including a network of genes associated with cell migration and adhesion. Srf-null stem cells and MPPs displayed impair expression of the integrin network and decreased adherence in vitro. In addition,Srf-null mice showed increase numbers of circulating stem and progenitor cells,which likely reflect their reduced retention in the BM. Altogether,our results demonstrate that Srf is an essential regulator of stem cells and MPP adhesion,and suggest that Srf acts mainly through cell-matrix interactions and integrin signaling.
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Chen Y-X et al. (JAN 2006)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 4 1018--23
The tumor suppressor menin regulates hematopoiesis and myeloid transformation by influencing Hox gene expression.
Menin is the product of the tumor suppressor gene Men1 that is mutated in the inherited tumor syndrome multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1). Menin has been shown to interact with SET-1 domain-containing histone 3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferases including mixed lineage leukemia proteins to regulate homeobox (Hox) gene expression in vitro. Using conditional Men1 knockout mice,we have investigated the requirement for menin in hematopoiesis and myeloid transformation. Men1 excision causes reduction of Hoxa9 expression,colony formation by hematopoietic progenitors,and the peripheral white blood cell count. Menin directly activates Hoxa9 expression,at least in part,by binding to the Hoxa9 locus,facilitating methylation of H3K4,and recruiting the methylated H3K4 binding protein chd1 to the locus. Consistent with signaling downstream of menin,ectopic expression of both Hoxa9 and Meis1 rescues colony formation defects in Men1-excised bone marrow. Moreover,Men1 excision also suppresses proliferation of leukemogenic mixed lineage leukemia-AF9 fusion-protein-transformed myeloid cells and Hoxa9 expression. These studies uncover an important role for menin in both normal hematopoiesis and myeloid transformation and provide a mechanistic understanding of menin's function in these processes that may be used for therapy.
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