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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a malignant disease of the human hematopoietic stem cell caused by the BCR/ABL gene rearrangement. The only curative therapy is allogeneic transplantation. Although autologous transplants may prolong survival, most patients relapse because of disease persisting in the host and in the graft. Continued administration of chemotherapy after transplant could reduce the incidence of relapse provided that the autograft can be protected by transfer of a drug-resistance gene. However, CML autografts will almost certainly contain malignant stem cells that will also be rendered drug-resistant. The presence of the BCR/ABL oncoprotein is necessary and sufficient for malignant transformation seen in CML. We thus hypothesized that transfer of a vector that combines a drug-resistance gene with anti-BCR/ABL antisense (AS) sequences may allow for posttransplant chemotherapy to decrease persistent disease while rendering inadvertently transduced CML stem and progenitor cells functionally normal. We constructed a retroviral vector, LasBD, that combines the methotrexate (MTX)-resistant tyrosine-22 dihydrofolate-reductase (tyr22-DHFR) gene and AS sequences directed at the b3a2 BCR/ABL breakpoint. b3a2 BCR/ABL containing 32D and MO7e cells were transduced with LasBD and selected in MTX for 14 days. Expression of the AS sequences reduced BCR/ABL mRNA and p210(BCR/ABL) protein levels by 6- to 10-fold in most cells. This subsequently led to the restoration of normal function of BCR/ABL cDNA+ cells: they grew significantly slower in the presence of interleukin-3 (IL-3); they underwent apoptotic cell death when cultured without IL-3; and they had restored expression and function of adhesion receptors. These effects were specific, because LasBD-containing AS sequences directed at the b3a2 BCR/ABL breakpoint did not affect
p190
(BCR/ABL)-containing cells. LasBD also rendered 20% to 30% of primary Ph- and Ph+ CD34(+) cells MTX-resistant and decreased BCR/ABL mRNA levels in MTX resistant Ph+ CD34(+) cells by 10-fold. Expression of the MTX-resistant DHFR gene and the AS sequences has been stable for at least 1 year in vitro and for more than 70 days in vivo. Finally, LasBD decreased tumorigenicity of 32DBCR/
ABL
cells in vivo by 3 to 4 logs. In conclusion, the tyr22-DHFR gene in the LasBD vector can protect normal hematopoietic cells from MTX-mediated toxicity, whereas the AS sequences in LasBD can suppress expression of the BCR/ABL gene and restore normal function of BCR/ABL cDNA-containing cells. The LasBD vector may therefore prove to be an extremely useful adjunct in autologous transplantation for CML.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML): a retroviral vector that renders hematopoietic progenitors methotrexate-resistant and CML progenitors functionally normal and nontumorigenic in vivo. 938 83
The interleukin-3 dependent murine Ba/F3 cell line has been widely used as an experimental model of cell transformation by BCR-
ABL
oncogenes as assessed by induction of growth-factor-independence and inhibition of apoptosis in vitro. The signaling pathways used by BCR-
ABL
oncogenes to exert these effects are unknown. To gain insights into this phenomenon, we have introduced the
p190
- and p210-encoding BCR-
ABL
oncogenes as well as the constitutively activated oncogenic murine erythropoietin receptor (cEpoR) into Ba/F3 and compared the behavior of individual clones in response to apoptotic stimuli. Both p210 and
p190
BCR-
ABL
vectors induced IL-3-independent growth and the same result was obtained with the cEpo-R vector. Individual clones of Ba/F3 cells expressing BCR-
ABL
exhibited significant resistance to apoptosis induced by either etoposide, serum deprivation or growth-factor withdrawal. In contrast, Ba/F3 cells expressing the constitutively active cEpoR behaved like parental Ba/F3 cells undergoing apoptosis when similarly treated with etoposide or upon serum deprivation. Bc12 and Bax levels were similar in all BCR-
ABL
and cEpoR-transfected clones. However, in band-shift assays, nuclear extracts from growth-factor-independent Ba/F3 clones expressing cEpoR had no detectable STAT activity as opposed to the constitutive STAT activation detected in all Ba/F3 clones expressing p210 or
p190
BCR-
ABL
. Our results indicate that although both constitutively activated cEpoR and BCR-
ABL
oncogenes induce growth-factor independence in Ba/F3 cells, only BCR-
ABL
is able to protect cells from etoposide and serum-deprivation-induced apoptosis and induce a strong constitutive activation of STAT factors, suggesting a role for these molecules in the anti-apoptotic activity of BCR-
ABL
.
...
PMID:BCR-ABL and constitutively active erythropoietin receptor (cEpoR) activate distinct mechanisms for growth factor-independence and inhibition of apoptosis in Ba/F3 cell line. 948 38
Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is considered a clonal disease restricted to the lymphoid compartment. The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) is found in a subset of ALL with poor prognosis. Here we present the largest series of Ph+ ALL analyzed for involvement of the myeloid compartment. For the first time at a single cell level the presence of Ph in lineages other than lymphoid is demonstrated. Granulocytes from nine patients diagnosed with BCR-
ABL
+ ALL (eight Ph+, one Ph-) were purified using two layer density gradient separation. They were further identified by the morphology of DAPI-stained nuclei and studied for the presence of the Ph by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using a BCR-
ABL
dual-color probe. Ph was demonstrated in 30 to 93% of granulocytes in all patients. FISH identified major and minor BCR gene breakpoints (M-bcr and m-bcr). In one patient, with CD19+/34+/33-/2-/3-/7-/10- lymphoblasts, involvement of B cells (CD19+), T cells (CD3+), myeloid (CD13+), erythroid (glycophorin A+) cells was found by FISH following fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). The diagnosis of ALL as opposed to lymphoblastic transformation of CML was established based on clinical and laboratory data including Western blot results demonstrating the presence of
p190
/m-bcr in five of the nine cases studied. Results suggest that Ph+ ALL originates from a pluripotent stem cell.
...
PMID:Multilineage involvement of Philadelphia chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 959 63
A 46-year-old female presented with acute myeloid leukemia during complete remission of multiple myeloma after extensive treatment with alkylating agents. Leukemic blasts expressed CD34, platelet esterase and gp IIIa. RT-PCR analyses of peripheral blood cells detected a
p190
type BCR-
ABL
rearrangement and high levels of MDR1. The patient expired during neutropenia shortly after induction chemotherapy. Autopsy revealed persistent blasts in the bone marrow, spleen and liver. 'Secondary' acute myeloid leukemia with megakaryoblastic features and
p190
-type BCR-
ABL
rearrangement has not previously been reported. The possibility that the combination of a BCR-
ABL
rearrangement with overexpression of MDR1 may have contributed to the treatment-refractory course is discussed.
...
PMID:Drug resistance of secondary acute myeloid leukemia with megakaryoblastic features and p190 BCR-ABL rearrangement. 978 5
The number of genetic lesions necessary to generate leukemia in humans is unknown, but it is possible that certain specific abnormalities, eg, fusion genes, known to be associated with acute and chronic leukemia are produced relatively frequently in human cells but require other events to occur before the leukemia becomes manifest. We investigated this possibility by studying peripheral blood leukocytes from normal individuals and various hematopoietic cell lines for the presence and expression of the p210 and the
p190
types of the BCR-
ABL
gene associated with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. We used two-step reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assays in which batches of 10(8) cells per sample were tested in 40 replicate reactions. We estimate that this assay is 1.5 logs more sensitive than the two-step RT-PCR assays that we use routinely to assess minimal residual disease. BCR-ABL fusion gene transcripts of various configurations were found in circulating leukocytes from 12 of the 16 healthy adults analyzed. Transcripts with an e1a2 junction (
p190
BCR-
ABL
) were present in 11 and p210-type transcripts with b2a2 and/or b3a2 junctions were detected in 4 individuals. The same RT-PCR assays in non-CML cell lines showed the presence of classical or aberrant p210-type mRNA in 3 of 7 lines and of
p190
-type transcripts in all 7 lines of hematopoietic origin (HL60, KG1, U937, Kasumi, Jurkat, JVM13, and JVM25), whereas the NIH3T3 murine fibroblast line was reproducibly negative for these fusion genes. These findings confirm and extend previous reports on the detection of leukemia-associated genes in normal leukocytes and suggest that certain fusion genes are generated relatively frequently in hematopoietic cells, but only infrequently do the cells acquire the additional changes necessary to produce leukemia in humans. Although there is only a small probability that such innocent BCR-
ABL
-carrying leukocytes are detected by conventional RT-PCR assays, they may be the source of some sporadically positive tests in leukemia patients in long-term remission.
...
PMID:The presence of typical and atypical BCR-ABL fusion genes in leukocytes of normal individuals: biologic significance and implications for the assessment of minimal residual disease. 978 74
An immunosuppressive but not myeloablative regimen followed by HLA-matched donor mobilized haemopoietic stem cell transplantation was employed in two high-risk patients. The first patient had refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB) and cytogenetic evidence of translocation 1;3(p36;q21). The second patient had Philadelphia-negative but
p190
BCR-
ABL
chimaeric gene positive chronic myelogenous leukaemia in accelerated phase (AP-CML). The conditioning regimen consisted of fludarabine (30 mg/m2/d, days 1-3) with cyclophosphamide (300 mg/m2/d, days 1-3). Cyclosporine and methotrexate were employed for acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) prophylaxis. In both cases the engraftment of donor cells was demonstrated by cytogenetics and short tandem repeat polymorphisms via PCR. Both patients are alive with normal cytogenetic (RAEB) and molecular (AP-CML) remissions, 100 and 150 d after allografting, respectively. In particular, in the AP-CML patient, the BCR-
ABL
became undetectable and the BCR-
ABL
/
ABL
ratio was <0.0001.
...
PMID:Evidence of cytogenetic and molecular remission by allogeneic cells after immunosuppressive therapy alone. 982 37
The hallmark of chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) is the presence of the Philadelphia chromosome and its resultant fusion message, BCR-
ABL
, and fusion protein, p210. Patients with CML in blast crisis, or with Philadelphia positive acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), can have a smaller BCR-ABL fusion transcript possessing only the first exon of BCR fused to
ABL
. This smaller transcript encodes a 190 kD protein which is more strongly transforming than the p210 protein derived from the larger CML-associated transcript. We performed RT-PCR on samples from CML patients in chronic phase to determine the frequency and mechanism of
p190
and p210 co-expression and to see if this correlated with clinical indices. We examined the peripheral blood or marrow of 67 patients with CML and found that 35 of them expressed both transcripts whereas the remainder expressed the p210-encoding transcript exclusively. Additional PCR products of an intermediate size were also frequently detected and have been isolated and sequenced. Data from two of these products indicate that they are the result of alternative splicing and include variable combinations of BCR exons. We believe that the expression of the
p190
-encoding transcript in the chronic phase of CML is also due to alternative splicing. A comparison of patients co-expressing the
p190
- and p210-encoding transcripts with those patients who expressed only the p210-encoding transcript detected significantly higher white blood cell (WBC) counts and blast cell counts at time of testing as well as significantly higher white blood cell counts at diagnosis.
...
PMID:Expression of p210 and p190 BCR-ABL due to alternative splicing in chronic myelogenous leukaemia. 985 21
Human mesangial cells (HMCs) respond to angiotensin II stimulation, which modulates their physiological activities, i.e., contraction and proliferation. It has been revealed that
focal adhesion kinase
(
FAK
) and paxillin participate in the angiotensin II-mediated signaling and cytoskeletal rearrangements at focal adhesion. We investigated the influences of cell adhesion upon angiotensin II effects in HMCs. In adherent cells, both
FAK
and paxillin were tyrosine phosphorylated by angiotensin II, while the cell detachment completely inhibited the tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin. Activation of p44/42 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase by angiotensin II was accentuated in suspended cells. Moreover,
p190
, a member of Rho GTPase activating protein (GAP), and RasGAP were coprecipitated with paxillin in adherent cells and angiotensin II stimulation reduced the formation of paxillin-
p190
and paxillin-RasGAP complexes. These results suggest that the formation of focal adhesion complexes accelerated by accumulation of mesangial matrices may inhibit the proliferation of HMCs by modulating MAP kinase activity and be related to mesangial cell depletion.
...
PMID:Signaling transduction pathway of angiotensin II in human mesangial cells: mediation of focal adhesion and GTPase activating proteins. 1009 39
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is characterized by the Philadelphia chromosome resulting from the translocation t(9-22) producing the chimeric 190 and 210 kDa BCR-ABL fusion proteins. Evolution of the CML to the more agressive acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is accompanied by increased cellular proliferation and genomic instability at the cytogenetic level. We hypothezised that genomic instability at the nucleotide level and spontaneous error in DNA replication may also contribute to the evolution of CML to AML. Murine Ba/F3 cell line was transfected with the
p190
and p210-encoding BCR-
ABL
oncogenes, and spontaneous mutation frequency at the Na-K-ATPase and the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) loci were measured. A significant 3-5-fold increase in mutation frequency for the transfected cells relative to the untransfected control cells was found. Furthermore, we observed that BCR-
ABL
transfection induced an overexpression of DNA polymerase beta, the most inaccurate of the mammalian DNA polymerases, as well as an increase in its activity, suggesting that inaccuracy of DNA replication may account for the observed mutator phenotype. These data suggest that the Philadelphia abnormality confers a mutator phenotype and may have implications for the potential role of DNA polymerase beta in this process.
...
PMID:Mutator phenotype of BCR--ABL transfected Ba/F3 cell lines and its association with enhanced expression of DNA polymerase beta. 1034 41
We analysed 20 patients with BCR-
ABL
-positive acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) by quantitative competitive polymerase chain reaction (QC-PCR) to study the kinetics of the leukaemic clone. Consecutive samples of 16 patients (minor-bcr, n = 10; major-bcr, n = 6) were analysed after conventional chemotherapy and/or bone marrow transplantation (BMT). DNA competitor templates co-amplifying with either p210 or
p190
BCR-
ABL
cDNA were used for quantification of leukaemia-specific BCR-
ABL
mRNA. In all samples, total
ABL
transcripts were measured as internal control, and the percentage of BCR-
ABL
/
ABL
molecules was calculated. Following induction chemotherapy the number of BCR-
ABL
transcripts was reduced by a maximum of 2-3 logs. In most patients, additional chemotherapy did not lead to further reduction of BCR-
ABL
mRNA. In two patients, conventional chemotherapy plus autologous BMT in complete haematological remission resulted in a total reduction of the transcript level of more than 3 logs. In two other patients, allogeneic BMT caused a transient reduction of the BCR-
ABL
transcripts below the detection level of our method (<1 blast cell in 105 normal cells) for a period of 7 and 11 months, respectively. The achievement of PCR negativity did not guarantee sustained remission. Both patients relapsed and BCR-
ABL
transcript levels rose by more than 1 log prior to frank relapse. Our data demonstrate that quantification of BCR-
ABL
mRNA allows the evaluation of the dynamics of the leukaemic clone and thus is valuable for the evaluation of minimal residual leukaemia following various therapies and the early detection of increasing BCR-
ABL
transcripts prior to relapse.
...
PMID:Quantification of minimal residual disease in patients with BCR-ABL-positive acute lymphoblastic leukaemia using quantitative competitive polymerase chain reaction. 1046 51
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