威尼斯人
癌症研究
髓系白血病
CD44细胞
干细胞
SOX2
白血病
生物
免疫学
胚胎干细胞
细胞
细胞生物学
遗传学
基因
慢性淋巴细胞白血病
作者
Xiaobing Yu,Leonel Munoz−Sagredo,Karolin Streule,Patricia Muschong,Elisabeth Bayer,Romina J Walter,Julia Gutjahr,Richard Greil,Miguel L. Concha,Carsten Müller‐Tidow,Tanja Nicole Hartmann,Véronique Orian−Rousseau
出处
期刊:Blood
[American Society of Hematology]
日期:2021-06-03
卷期号:138 (12): 1067-1080
被引量:27
标识
DOI:10.1182/blood.2020006343
摘要
Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has a poor prognosis under the current standard of care. In recent years, venetoclax, a BCL-2 inhibitor, was approved to treat patients who are ineligible for intensive induction chemotherapy. However, complete remission rates with venetoclax-based therapies are hampered by minimal residual disease (MRD) in a proportion of patients, leading to relapse. MRD is a result of leukemic stem cells being retained in bone marrow protective environments; activation of the CXCL12-CXCR4 pathway was shown to be relevant to this process. An important role is also played by cell adhesion molecules such as CD44, which has been shown to be crucial for the development of AML. Here we show that CD44 is involved in CXCL12 promotion of resistance to venetoclax-induced apoptosis in human AML cell lines and AML patient samples, which could be abrogated by CD44 knock down, knockout, or blocking with an anti-CD44 antibody. Split-Venus bimolecular fluorescence complementation showed that CD44 and CXCR4 physically associate at the cell membrane upon CXCL12 induction. In the venetoclax-resistant OCI-AML3 cell line, CXCL12 promoted an increase in the proportion of cells expressing high levels of embryonic stem cell core transcription factors (ESC-TFs: Sox2, Oct4, Nanog) abrogated by CD44 knockdown. This ESC-TF–expressing subpopulation which could be selected by venetoclax treatment, exhibited a basally enhanced resistance to apoptosis and expressed higher levels of CD44. Finally, we developed a novel AML xenograft model in zebrafish, which showed that CD44 knockout sensitizes OCI-AML3 cells to venetoclax treatment in vivo. Our study shows that CD44 is a potential molecular target for sensitizing AML cells to venetoclax-based therapies.
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