19 research outputs found

    In vivo modelling of tumour suppressor gene function

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    LKB1 has been implicated in a wide range of cellular functions and is associated with many potential substrates in in vitro studies, however the in vivo role of LKB1 remains unclear and its precise contribution to the prevention of intestinal tumours in the hereditary Peutz-Jegers syndrome is as yet uncharacterised. Conditional deletion of LKB1 in the murine small intestine resulted in significant disruption of intestinal homeostasis, particularly that of the differentiation process, suggesting LKB1 plays a key role in intestinal differentiation and it is loss of this function that predisposes to tumourigenesi

    The PDK1 master kinase is over-expressed in acute myeloid leukemia and promotes PKC-mediated survival of leukemic blasts

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    PDK1 is a master kinase that activates at least six protein kinase groups including AKT, PKC and S6K and is a potential target in the treatment of a range of malignancies. Here we show overexpression of PDK1 in over 40% of myelomonocytic acute leukemia patients. Overexpression of PDK1 occurred uniformly throughout the leukemic population, including putative leukemia-initiating cells. Clinical outcome analysis revealed PDK1 overexpression was associated with poorer treatment outcome. Primary acute myeloid leukemia blasts over-expressing PDK1 showed improved in vitro survival and ectopic expression of PDK1 promoted the survival of myeloid cell lines. Analysis of PDK1 target kinases revealed that PDK1 overexpression was most closely associated with increased phosphorylation of PKC isoenzymes and inhibition of PKC strongly inhibited the survival advantage of PDK1 over-expressing cells. Membrane localization studies implicated PKCĪ± as a major target for PDK1 in this disease. PDK1 over-expressing blasts showed differential sensitivity to PDK1 inhibition (in the low micromolar range) suggesting oncogene addiction, whilst normal bone marrow progenitors were refractory to PDK1 inhibition at effective inhibitor concentrations. PDK1 inhibition also targeted subpopulations of leukemic blasts with a putative leukemia-initiating cell phenotype. Together these data show that overexpression of PDK1 is common in acute myelomonocytic leukemia and is associated with poorer treatment outcome, probably arising from the cytoprotective function of PDK1. We also show that therapeutic targeting of PDK1 has the potential to be both an effective and selective treatment for these patients, and is also compatible with current treatment regimes

    The targeted histone deacetylase inhibitor tefinostat (CHR-2845) shows selective in vitro efficacy in monocytoid-lineage leukaemias

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    Tefinostat (CHR-2845) is a novel monocyte/macrophage-targeted histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor which is cleaved into its active acid by the intracellular esterase human carboxylesterase-1 (hCE-1). The in vitro efficacy of tefinostat was characterised in cell lines and in a cohort of 73 primary AML and CMML samples. Dose-dependent induction of apoptosis and significant growth inhibitory effects were seen in myelomonocytic (M4), monocytic/monoblastic (M5) and CMML samples in comparison to non-monocytoid AML sub-types (p = 0.007). Importantly, no growth inhibitory effects were seen in normal bone marrow CD34+ cells exposed to AML-toxic doses of tefinostat in clonogenic assays. Expression of hCE-1 was measured by intracellular flow cytometry and immunoblotting across the cohort, with highest levels seen in M5 AML patients. hCE-1 levels correlated with significantly increased tefinostat sensitivity (low EC50) as measured by growth inhibition assays (p = 0.001)and concomitant elevation of the mature monocytoid marker CD14+. Strong induction of intracellular histone protein acetylation was observed in tefinostat-responsive samples, as were high levels of the DNA damage sensor Ī³-H2A.X, highlighting potential biomarkers of patient responsiveness. Synergistic interaction between tefinostat and the current standard treatment cytarabine was demonstrated in dose response and clonogenic assays using simultaneous drug addition in primary samples (median Combination Index value = 0.51). These data provide a strong rationale for the further clinical evaluation of tefinostat in monocytoid-lineage haematological neoplasms including CMML and monocyte-lineage AMLs

    Combination of a mitogenā€activated protein kinase inhibitor with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor pacritinib combats cell adhesionā€based residual disease and prevents reā€expansion of FLT3 ā€ITD acute myeloid leukaemia

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    Minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) poses a major challenge due to drug insensitivity and high risk of relapse. Intensification of chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation are often pivoted on MRD status. Relapse rates are high even with the integration of firstā€generation FMSā€like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) inhibitors in preā€ and postā€transplant regimes and as maintenance in FLT3 ā€mutated AML. Preā€clinical progress is hampered by the lack of suitable modelling of residual disease and postā€therapy relapse. In the present study, we investigated the nature of proā€survival signalling in primary residual tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI)ā€treated AML cells adherent to stroma and further determined their drug sensitivity in order to inform rational future therapy combinations. Using a primary human leukaemiaā€human stroma model to mimic the cellā€“cell interactions occurring in patients, the ability of several TKIs in clinical use, to abrogate stromaā€driven leukaemic signalling was determined, and a synergistic combination with a mitogenā€activated protein kinase (MEK) inhibitor identified for potential therapeutic application in the MRD setting. The findings reveal a common mechanism of stromaā€mediated resistance that may be independent of mutational status but can be targeted through rational drug design, to eradicate MRD and reduce treatmentā€related toxicity

    Hypomethylation and aberrant expression of the glioma pathogenesis-related 1 gene in Wilms tumors

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    Wilms tumors (WTs) have a complex etiology, displaying genetic and epigenetic changes, including loss of imprinting (LOI) and tumor suppressor gene silencing. To identify new regions of epigenetic perturbation in WTs, we screened kidney and tumor DNA using CpG island (CGI) tags associated with cancer-specific DNA methylation changes. One such tag corresponded to a paralog of the glioma pathogenesis-related 1/related to testis-specific, vespid, and pathogenesis proteins 1 (GLIPR1/RTVP-1) gene, previously reported to be a tumor-suppressor gene silenced by hypermethylation in prostate cancer. Here we report methylation analysis of the GLIPR1/RTVP-1 gene in WTs and normal fetal and pediatric kidneys. Hypomethylation of the GLIPR1/RTVP-1 5ā€²-region in WTs relative to normal tissue is observed in 21/24 (87.5%) of WTs analyzed. Quantitative analysis of GLIPR1/RTVP-1 expression in 24 WTs showed elevated transcript levels in 16/24 WTs (67%), with 12 WTs displaying in excess of 20-fold overexpression relative to fetal kidney (FK) control samples. Immunohistochemical analysis of FK and WT corroborates the RNA expression data and reveals high GLIPR1/RTVP-1 in WT blastemal cells together with variable levels in stromal and epithelial components. Hypomethylation is also evident in the WT precursor lesions and nephrogenic rests (NRs), supporting a role for GLIPR1/RTVP-1 deregulation early in Wilms tumorigenesis. Our data show that, in addition to gene dosage changes arising from LOI and hypermethylation-induced gene silencing, gene activation resulting from hypomethylation is also prevalent in WTs. Copyright Ā© 2007 Neoplasia Press, Inc. All rights reserved

    Lkb1 Deficiency Alters Goblet and Paneth Cell Differentiation in the Small Intestine

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    The Lkb1 tumour suppressor is a multitasking kinase participating in a range of physiological processes. We have determined the impact of Lkb1 deficiency on intestinal homeostasis, particularly focussing on secretory cell differentiation and development since we observe strong expression of Lkb1 in normal small intestine Paneth and goblet cells. We crossed mice bearing an Lkb1 allele flanked with LoxP sites with those carrying a Cyp1a1-specific inducible Cre recombinase. Lkb1 was efficiently deleted from the epithelial cells of the mouse intestine after intraperitoneal injection of the inducing agent Ī²-naphthoflavone. Bi-allelic loss of Lkb1 led to the perturbed development of Paneth and goblet cell lineages. These changes were characterised by the lack of Delta ligand expression in Lkb1-deficient secretory cells and a significant increase in the levels of the downstream Notch signalling effector Hes5 but not Hes1. Our data show that Lkb1 is required for the normal differentiation of secretory cell lineages within the intestine, and that Lkb1 deficiency modulates Notch signalling modulation in post-mitotic cells

    In vivo modelling of tumour suppressor gene function

    No full text
    LKB1 has been implicated in a wide range of cellular functions and is associated with many potential substrates in in vitro studies, however the in vivo role of LKB1 remains unclear and its precise contribution to the prevention of intestinal tumours in the hereditary Peutz-Jegers syndrome is as yet uncharacterised. Conditional deletion of LKB1 in the murine small intestine resulted in significant disruption of intestinal homeostasis, particularly that of the differentiation process, suggesting LKB1 plays a key role in intestinal differentiation and it is loss of this function that predisposes to tumourigenesisEThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    DNA damage-induced apoptosis: insights from the mouse

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    The availability of murine models with precisely defined genetic lesions has greatly increased our understanding of the genetic control of cell death, with functional dependence established for a wide range of genes including (amongst others) the p53 and Bcl-2 gene family members, the mismatch repair (MMR) genes and the methyl binding domain family member Mbd4. These studies raised the attractive hypotheses that tumour predisposition may be explained in terms of failed cell death, and also that tumour regression may be initiated through activation of an apoptotic programme. The studies that have addressed these notions have revealed complex consequences of a failed death programme, such that these simple hypotheses have not always been supported. Remarkably, however, some tissues show more predictable responses than others, most apparent in the contrast between the intestine and the haematopoietic system. This review will focus upon a discussion of these relationships, and will also consider the relevance of some of these findings to tumour predisposition and regression

    Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)gallium(III)-loaded copolymer micelles as cytotoxic nanoconstructs for cosolvent-free organometallic drug delivery

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    Therapeutically useful concentrations of the water-insoluble organometallic drug, tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)gallium(III), are delivered to haematological cell lines without the need for toxic cosolvents. Delivery is by sequestration into aqueous micelles of a poly(ethylene glycol)/poly(propylene glycol)/poly(ethylene glycol) triblock copolymer using a facile method based on emulsion-mediated evaporation. The drug-loaded micelles function as a cell cycle inhibitor and cause cell death by a dose-dependent increase in apoptosis
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