Abstract
Abstract 1671
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML) is a disease resulting from the neoplastic transformation of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) by the translocated tyrosine kinase BCR/ABL. The BCR-ABL protein product is a constitutively active tyrosine kinase, which promotes cell survival and proliferation by means of diverse intracellular signaling pathways, thereby being the culprit for malignant transformation. The early growth response (Egr)-1 gene, a member of the Egr family of genes encoding for zinc-finger transcription factors, has been shown to be an early response gene, to mediate cellular responses to growth factors and to be a stress response gene. Both growth factor stimulation and stress in most cells causes rapid induction of Egr-1 within minutes that leads to the activation of downstream growth pathways in normal cells. Egr-1 regulates the expression of multiple genes, either directly or indirectly, that impact on cell cycle arrest, survival and/or apoptosis, which can interface with BCR-ABL signaling. Included among these genes are p53, TGFbeta, PTEN, gadd45a, gadd45b, Foxo3a, p21, FasL, and Trail.
There is a large body of evidence consistent with Egr-1 behaving as a tumor suppressor in hematopoietic cells, both in vivo & in vitro, in both humans & mice. This laboratory has shown that Egr-1 abrogates the block in M1 terminal differentiation imparted by either oncogenic c-Myc or E2F-1, suppressing their leukemia promoting function in nude mice. Since Egr-1 can be a tumor suppressor and its down-stream effectors cross-talk with BCR-ABL signaling it was asked if Egr-1 can act as a suppressor of BCR-ABL driven leukemogenesis. To assess the effect of Egr-1 on BCR-ABL driven leukemia, syngeneic wild type lethally irradiated mice were reconstituted with wild type or Egr-1 null myeloid progenitors transduced with a 210-kD BCR-ABL-expressing MSCV-retrovirus. It was observed that loss of Egr-1 accelerated the development of BCR-ABL driven leukemia in recipient mice. In vitro proliferation assays have shown enhanced proliferation capacity for BCR-ABL transduced Egr-1 null myeloid progenitors compared to wild type counterparts. In addition, flow cytometric analysis of Egr-1 null myeloid progenitors from bone marrow (BM) has shown a slightly smaller stem cell (Lineage- Sca+ and c-Kit+ [LSK]) population as compared to wild type progenitors from BM. Therefore, the accelerated induction of BCR/ABL-mediated leukemia using Egr-1 null progenitors cannot be accounted for by increased numbers of stem cells. Taken together, these results indicate that Egr-1 functions as a suppressor of BCR-ABL driven CML. Further elucidating the role of Egr-1 in the murine model of BCR-ABL driven leukemia and analysis of Egr-1 expression in human CML peripheral blood and BM could result in novel targets for diagnosis and prognosis, as well as for targeted therapeutics.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.