4 research outputs found

    HA14-1 selectively induces apoptosis in Bcl-2-overexpressing leukemia/lymphoma cells, and enhances cytarabine-induced cell death

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    The Bcl-2 oncoprotein is commonly overexpressed in hematological malignancy, where it promotes the survival of neoplastic cells. Recently, a small molecule (HA14-1) was reported to bind the surface pocket of Bcl-2 that mediates antiapoptotic interactions, triggering apoptosis in a Bcl-2-transfected cell line. We investigated the activity of this compound in a panel of malignant hematopoietic cell lines. Consistent with its proposed role as a Bcl-2 inhibitor, HA14-1 was most cytotoxic in lines expressing high levels of Bcl-2. In addition, at lower concentrations (5–12.5 muM), the compound predominantly triggered apoptosis. However, at concentrations two-fold higher than this and above, increasing primary necrosis was observed, suggesting the onset of interactions supplementary to Bcl-2 inhibition. In experiments on primary cells, 25 muM HA14-1 induced extensive apoptosis in acute leukemic blasts, but also suppressed normal hematopoietic colony formation to <50% of baseline. Importantly, low-concentration HA14-1 (5 muM) was nontoxic to normal colony-forming cells, whereas it enhanced the cytotoxicity of the antileukemia drug cytarabine in Bcl-2-positive lymphoblastic leukemia cells. In conclusion, our results indicate that HA14-1 at low concentration selectively triggers apoptosis in malignant hematopoietic cells that overexpress Bcl-2. Agents of this class may have particular utility in combination with cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs

    Adenovector-Mediated Cancer Gene Therapy

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