Abstract
Abstract 1361
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with MLL gene rearrangements (MLL+ALL) is chemoresistant and its prognosis is still dismal. MLL+ALL shows a unique gene profile clearly distinguishable from other types of ALL and AML, and CD44 is known as one of specific molecules expressed very highly in MLL+ALL. CD44, a transmembrane glycoprotein recently attracting an attention as a cancer stem cell marker for several types of cancers, is expressed on a variety of cells, and has the specific binding sites for hyaluronic acid (HA, formally hyaluronan). High-molecular-weight (HMW)-HA which exists as extracellular matrix in tissues is incorporated into cells in a CD44-dependent manner, and then is secreted from cells as low-molecular-weight (LMW) to ultra-low-molecular-weight (ULMW)-HA in normal and pathological conditions. The purpose of this study is to investigate the biological events elicited after ligand stimulation of CD44 by using distinct molecular sizes of HA (2.5mg/ml) in MLL+ALL. When cultured in the presence of ULMW-HA (6.4kDa), but not of LMW-HA (31kDa) or HMW-HA (980kDa), thymidine uptakes of cell lines expressing CD44 at very high levels (KOPB-26 and YACL-95) were gradually inhibited in the course of culture from day3 through day5 (greater than 90% decrease at day5), although those expressing CD44 at very low levels (KOCL58, KOCL69) were largely unaffected. Cell cycle analysis of KOPB-26 and YACL-95 using propidium iodide (PI) staining after ULMW-HA stimulation revealed no increase in G0/G1 and G2/M phases and subdiploid population, suggesting that a marked inhibition of thymidine uptakes is neither due to cell cycle arrest nor induction of apoptosis. Dye exclusion test showed a marked decrease in viability at days 3–5 after ULMW-HA stimulation, and flow cytometric analysis showed a gradual increase in the low FSC/high SSC population doubly labeled by Annexin V and PI. However, cytospine smears revealed a massive cell death lacking features characteristic of apoptosis. In addition, pan-caspase inhibitor Z-VAD did not block cell death and cleaved caspase 3 was not detected on flow cytometric analysis after ULMW-HA stimulation, resulting in the conclusion that ULMW-HA-induced cell death is not elicited by induction of apoptosis. Although levels of high-mobility group protein B1 (HMGB1) usually used as a necrosis marker was progressively elevated in culture media after ULMW-HA stimulation, the necrosis inhibitor Necrostatin-1 did not block the ULMW-HA-induced cell death. Finally, electromicroscopic examination was performed and revealed a marked extension of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and an increase in autophagsomes, and the autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine specifically suppressed cell death, indicating that ULMW-HA strongly induces ER stress leading to cell death by autophagy. Changes in ER stress and autophagy-associated molecules after ULMW-HA stimulation were also demonstrated. In conclusion, triggering of CD44 by ULMW-HA stimulation strongly elicits cell death by autophagy via ER stress in chemoresistant MLL+ALL. CD44-targeted therapy by ULMW-HA possibly becomes a useful strategy not only for MLL+ALL but also for CD44-high hematological and non-hematological tumors particularly for those in which the cancer stem cell population is highly positive for CD44.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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