Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
95,504 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The TCL1/MTCP1 oncogenes were identified on the basis of their involvement in T-cell prolymphocytic leukemia (T-PLL). TCL1 and MTCP1 proteins directly interact with AKT and modulate the AKT signal-transduction pathway, but the relevance of this mechanism in leukemogenesis remains unclear. We investigate the biologic functions of TCL1 in the T-cell lineage using various cell lines, and primary malignant and normal lymphocytes. In the Jurkat cell line, expression of TCL1 had no effect in unstimulated cells, whereas it abrogated activation-induced cell death (AICD). These cellular effects were concomitant with a major inhibition by TCL1 of PKCtheta and ERK pathways. Secondly, the TCL1-driven T-cell leukemia cell line SUP-T11 was shown to have impaired PKCtheta and ERK phosphorylation upon stimulation, which were restored by TCL1 inhibition using RNA interference. Finally, defects in these pathways were also observed in primary malignant (T-PLL) and transduced normal T lymphocytes expressing TCL1. Altogether, our data demonstrated that TCL1 inhibits AICD in T cells by blocking PKCtheta and ERK activation, upon cellular activation.
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PMID:The TCL1 oncoprotein inhibits activation-induced cell death by impairing PKCtheta and ERK pathways. 1784 28

Human leukemias harboring chromosomal translocations involving the mixed lineage leukemia (MLL, HRX, ALL-1) gene possess high-level expression, and frequent activating mutations of the receptor tyrosine kinase FLT3. We used a murine bone marrow transplant model to assess cooperation between MLL translocation and FLT3 activation. We demonstrate that MLL-AF9 expression induces acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) in approximately 70 days, whereas the combination of MLL-AF9 and FLT3-ITD does so in less than 30 days. Secondary transplantation of splenic cells from diseased mice established that leukemia stem cells are present at a very high frequency of approximately 1:100 in both diseases. Importantly, prospectively isolated granulocyte macrophage progenitors (GMPs) coinfected with MLL-AF9 and FLT3-ITD give rise to a similar AML, with shorter latency than from GMP transduced with MLL-AF9 alone. Cooperation between MLL-AF9 and FLT3-ITD was further verified by real-time assessment of leukemogenesis using noninvasive bioluminescence imaging. We used this model to demonstrate that MLL-AF9/FLT3-ITD-induced leukemias are sensitive to FLT3 inhibition in a 2-3 week in vivo assay. These data show that activated FLT3 cooperates with MLL-AF9 to accelerate onset of an AML from whole bone marrow as well as a committed hematopoietic progenitor, and provide a new genetically defined model system that should prove useful for rapid assessment of potential therapeutics in vivo.
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PMID:MLL-AF9 and FLT3 cooperation in acute myelogenous leukemia: development of a model for rapid therapeutic assessment. 1785 51

The balance between proangiogenic Angiopoietin-1 (Ang-1) and the antagonistic Ang-2 is important both for leukemogenesis and chemosensitivity in human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). We examined the release of Ang-1 and Ang-2 by AML cells cultured alone and in cocultures with stromal cells. Detectable Ang-1 release from AML cells was observed for most patients (62/91), whereas Ang-2 release was detected only for a minority (23/91). Coculture of AML and stromal cells led to increased Ang-1 levels. Furthermore, the role of the angiopoietin system was investigated by characterizing whether the differences in angiopoietin expression in AML patients can be related to nucleophosmin (NPM1) mutations. We compared the gene expression profiles of AML cells derived from 19 patients with FLT3 mutations and normal cytogenetics with and without NPM1 mutations and observed increased expression of Ang-1 in patients with NPM1 mutations. Finally, we found significantly higher Ang-2 levels in serum of AML patients compared with healthy controls. Our results suggest that AML cells are a major source of Ang-1 in leukemic bone marrow, especially in patients with NPM1 mutations, but the local levels are also influenced by stromal cells. Local Ang-2 release from AML cells is less common, but high systemic levels of Ang-2 may affect bone marrow angioregulation.
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PMID:Release of angiopoietin-1 by primary human acute myelogenous leukemia cells is associated with mutations of nucleophosmin, increased by bone marrow stromal cells and possibly antagonized by high systemic angiopoietin-2 levels. 1794 67

c-KIT mutations have been described in core-binding factor (CBF) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) at diagnosis. The role of c-KIT mutations in the relapse of CBF-AML is not clear. The role of CSF1R mutation in the pathogenesis of AML remains to be determined. We analyzed receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) and Ras mutations on 154 children with AML. Also, we examined the paired diagnosis and relapse samples in CBF-AML. CBF-AML accounted for 27% (41/154). c-KIT mutations were detected in 41.5% of CBF-AML at diagnosis (6 in exon 8, 10 in exon 17 and 1 in both exons 8 and 17) , FLT3-TKD 2.7%, N-Ras mutations 7.3% and K-Ras mutations 4.9%. FLT3-LM and CSF1R mutations were not found in CBF-AML. The mutations of RTKs and Ras were mutually exclusive except for one patient who had both c-KIT and N-Ras mutations. Eight of the 41 CBF-AML patients relapsed; four patients retained the identical c-KIT mutation patterns as those at diagnosis, the remaining four without c-KIT mutations at diagnosis did not acquire c-KIT mutations at relapse. Our study showed that 54% of childhood CBF-AML had RTKs and/or Ras mutations; c-KIT but not CSF1R mutations play a role in the leukemogenesis of childhood CBF-AML.
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PMID:Cooperating mutations of receptor tyrosine kinases and Ras genes in childhood core-binding factor acute myeloid leukemia and a comparative analysis on paired diagnosis and relapse samples. 1796 Jan 71

Mutations in the juxtamembrane and kinase domains of FLT3 are common in AML, but it is not known whether alterations outside these regions contribute to leukemogenesis. We used a high-throughput platform to interrogate the entire FLT3 coding sequence in AML patients without known FLT3 mutations and experimentally tested the consequences of each candidate leukemogenic allele. This approach identified gain-of-function mutations that activated downstream signaling and conferred sensitivity to FLT3 inhibition and alleles that were not associated with kinase activation, including mutations in the catalytic domain. These findings support the concept that acquired mutations in cancer may not contribute to malignant transformation and underscore the importance of functional studies to distinguish "driver" mutations underlying tumorigenesis from biologically neutral "passenger" alterations.
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PMID:Identification of driver and passenger mutations of FLT3 by high-throughput DNA sequence analysis and functional assessment of candidate alleles. 1806 28

Neoangiogenesis plays an important role in leukemogenesis. We investigated the in vivo anti-leukemic effect of ABT-869 against AML with wild-type FLT3 using RFP transfected HL60 cells with in vivo imaging technology on both the subcutaneous and systemic leukemia xenograft models. ABT-869 showed a five-fold inhibition of tumor growth in comparison with vehicle control. IHC analysis revealed that ABT-869 decreased p-VEGFR1, Ki-67 labeling index, VEGF and remarkably increased apoptotic cells in the xenograft models. ABT-869 also reduced the leukemia burden and prolonged survival. Our study supports the rationale for clinically testing an anti-angiogenesis agent in AML with wild-type FLT3.
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PMID:In vivo activity of ABT-869, a multi-target kinase inhibitor, against acute myeloid leukemia with wild-type FLT3 receptor. 1816 Jan 2

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous group of neoplastic disorders with great variability in clinical course and response to therapy, as well as in the genetic and molecular basis of the pathology. Major advances in the understanding of leukemogenesis have been made by the characterization and the study of acquired cytogenetic abnormalities, particularly reciprocal translocations observed in AML. Besides these major cytogenetic abnormalities, gene mutations also constitute key events in AML pathogenesis. In this review, we describe the contribution of known gene mutations to the understanding of AML pathogenesis and their clinical significance. To gain more insight in this understanding, we clustered these alterations in three groups: (1) mutations affecting genes that contribute to cell proliferation (FLT3, c-KIT, RAS, protein tyrosine standard phosphatase nonreceptor 11); (2) mutations affecting genes involved in myeloid differentiation (AML1 and CEBPA) and (3) mutations affecting genes implicated in cell cycle regulation or apoptosis (P53, NPM1). This nonexhaustive review aims to show how gene mutations interact with each other, how they contribute to refine prognosis and how they can be useful for risk-adapted therapeutic management of AML patients.
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PMID:Cooperating gene mutations in acute myeloid leukemia: a review of the literature. 1828 31

The Raf/MEK/ERK, PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR and Jak/STAT pathways are frequently activated in leukemia and other hematopoietic disorders by upstream mutations in cytokine receptors, aberrant chromosomal translocations as well as other genetic mechanisms. The Jak2 kinase is frequently mutated in many myeloproliferative disorders. Effective targeting of these pathways may result in suppression of cell growth and death of leukemic cells. Furthermore it may be possible to combine various chemotherapeutic and antibody-based therapies with low molecular weight, cell membrane-permeable inhibitors which target the Raf/MEK/ERK, PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR and Jak/STAT pathways to ultimately suppress the survival pathways, induce apoptosis and inhibit leukemic growth. In this review, we summarize how suppression of these pathways may inhibit key survival networks important in leukemogenesis and leukemia therapy as well as the treatment of other hematopoietic disorders. Targeting of these and additional cascades may also improve the therapy of chronic myelogenous leukemia, which are resistant to BCR-ABL inhibitors. Furthermore, we discuss how targeting of the leukemia microenvironment and the leukemia stem cell are emerging fields and challenges in targeted therapies.
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PMID:Targeting survival cascades induced by activation of Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK, PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTOR and Jak/STAT pathways for effective leukemia therapy. 1833 66

The EEN (extra eleven nineteen) gene is one of the fusion partners of mixed-lineage leukemia, located on chromosome 19p13. Here we cloned two een genes (designated as eena and eenb) in zebrafish, which are assigned to linkage groups 8 and 2, respectively. Whole-mount in situ hybridization assay showed that eena and eenb have overlapping but distinct expression patterns during embryogenesis. Ubiquitous or targeted overexpression of eena, but not eenb, into wild-type or transgenic embryos (green fluorescent protein-labeled myeloid progenitors) induced a significant proliferation and ectopic distribution of myeloid progenitors in the yolk sac. Using a morpholino antisense gene knockdown approach, we showed that the number of myeloid progenitors and their downstream mature myelomonocytic cells was significantly decreased in the eena- deficient embryos. Mechanistically, overexpression of eena selectively stimulated ERK phosphorylation and increased the level of transcription factor c-Fos in vitro and in vivo, whereas eena lacking the Src homology 3 domain completely abolished these effects. Furthermore, a MAPK/ERK kinase (MEK) inhibitor, PD98059, blocked the eena-induced cell proliferation and activation of ERK signaling. The results suggest that eena plays an important role in the development of the myeloid cell through activation of the ERK pathway and may provide a valuable reference for future studies of the role of EEN in leukemogenesis.
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PMID:eena Promotes myeloid proliferation through stimulating ERK1/2 phosphorylation in zebrafish. 1841 15

The discovery of underlying genetic lesions helps to better understand the mechanisms of leukemogenesis and identify prognostic subgroups. Recent insights have allowed normal karyotype acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to be split into many molecular entities according to the genetic status of FLT3, NPM, CEBPA and MLL. Genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism analysis was performed on 22 well-characterised AML patients with a normal karyotype. At the same time, microsatellite instability was investigated using a commonly used panel of polymorphic markers. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was found in 22.7% of cases without an associated copy number variation, suggesting that LOH represented an acquired partial uniparental disomy (aUPD) event. Three UPD+ cases harboured NPM mutations, associated with FLT3-ITD in two of them. An additional UPD patient had mutations both in CEBPA and in WT1. MSI was present at three loci in the three UPD+ cases (60%), whereas single locus MSI was present in three UPD- patients (17%). MSI involved the polymorphic PIG3 promoter in two UPD+ cases. It remains to be tested whether UPD and MSI association marks a common pathway of leukemogenesis.
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PMID:Uniparental disomy may be associated with microsatellite instability in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with a normal karyotype. 1845 69


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