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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was designed to investigate the biologic and molecular basis of the aggressive behavior of high-grade post-thymic T-cell malignancies. Freshly frozen tumor tissues from (1) human T-cell
leukemia
/lymphoma virus type I (HTLV-I)-positive adult T-cell lymphoma (ATL) (7 cases), (2) HTLV-I-negative aggressive T-cell lymphoma (12 cases), and (3) HTLV-I-negative nonaggressive T-cell lymphoma (11 cases) were studied for the expression of several growth-related genes or proliferation antigens including interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R), Ki-67, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta),
topoisomerase
, and the multidrug resistance (MDR) gene by immunohistochemistry and Northern blot hybridization. Our results showed that tumor cells associated with HTLV-I and anaplastic morphology had an enhanced expression of Ki-67, TGF-beta, and
topoisomerase
, as compared to nonaggressive T-cell lymphoma. The expression of IL-2R was limited to ATL and one Ki-1 lymphoma. The MDR gene was frequently expressed in ATL, but only infrequently in other, HTLV-I-negative, malignancies. Clinical progression or relapse was associated with the expression of MDR, in addition to an increased expression of Ki-67. We therefore conclude that the aggressive clinical behavior of high-grade T-cell lymphoma may result mainly from the high proliferative activity of tumor cells, but the association with HTLV-I and clinical relapse is further complicated by the development of drug resistance.
...
PMID:Expression of growth-related genes and drug-resistance genes in HTLV-I-positive and HTLV-I-negative post-thymic T-cell malignancies. 167 81
The effect of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) on
DNA topoisomerase II
(topo II) expression was studied in two human acute myelogenous leukemia cell lines, NKM-1 and NOMO-1, which express G-CSF receptor and proliferate in response to exogenous G-CSF. Northern blot analysis revealed that the level of topo II mRNA in 16-h stimulated cells in serum-free medium with G-CSF (10 ng/ml) was approximately 2-fold higher than that in cells without G-CSF. Enhanced topo II mRNA expression was detectable within 3 h after the addition of G-CSF. Topo II activity in crude nuclear extracts from 16-h G-CSF-stimulated cells was also found to be approximately 2-fold greater than that from unstimulated cells. According to in vitro cytotoxic assay, the sensitivity of G-CSF-stimulated cells to intercalating (daunorubicin) and nonintercalating (etoposide) topo II-targeting drugs increased significantly, whereas no enhancement of sensitivity was observed with an alkylating agent (4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide). The augmented drug sensitivity observed was not due to the increased level of drug transport, as suggested by the similar extent of [3H]etoposide uptake between G-CSF-stimulated and unstimulated cells. By measuring the topo II mRNA and the cytotoxicity of the above mentioned drugs, we obtained essentially the same results in G-CSF-responsive
leukemia
cells isolated from three acute myeloblastic leukemia patients, as observed in the cultured cell lines. These findings strongly suggest that the sensitivity to "topo II-targeting drugs" could be augmented by exogenous G-CSF through elevated topo II activity in G-CSF-responsive
leukemia
cells.
...
PMID:Enhanced expression of DNA topoisomerase II by recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in human leukemia cells. 169 57
To search for possible synergy between
topoisomerase
(topo) II-directed chemotherapeutic agents and topo I-directed agents, IL-60 human progranulocytic
leukemia
cells were incubated with etoposide in the absence or presence of camptothecin (CPT). Treatment of HL-60 cells for 1 h with 15-20 microM etoposide resulted in the death of 99-99.9% of the cells as assessed by colony formation in soft agar. Unexpectedly, simultaneous incubation with 1 microM CPT increased the survival of etoposide-treated cells as much as 30-fold. Inhibition of etoposide cytotoxicity was observed at CPT concentrations as low as 0.01 microM and was one-half maximal at 0.1 microM. CPT also antagonized the cytotoxicity of 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-M-anisidide and daunorubicin, two structurally unrelated topo II-directed agents. Topotecan, a CPT analogue currently undergoing Phase I clinical trials, had a similar effect. Studies using an alkaline unwinding assay (to measure DNA strand breaks) and Western blotting (to assess formation of covalent adducts involving topo II) revealed that CPT did not alter the ability of etoposide to stabilize topo II-DNA adducts. CPT is a potent inhibitor of both DNA and RNA synthesis. To further assess the mechanism by which CPT diminished the cytotoxicity of topo II-directed agents, inhibitors of DNA synthesis or RNA synthesis were substituted for CPT. Aphidicolin, an inhibitor of replicative DNA polymerases, enhanced the survival of etoposide-treated HL-60 cells less than 3-fold. In contrast, inhibitors of RNA synthesis (cordycepin or 5,6-dichloro-1-beta-D-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole) enhanced the survival of etoposide-treated HL-60 cells as much as 20-fold. The potential biological and therapeutic implications of these results are discussed.
...
PMID:Antagonism between camptothecin and topoisomerase II-directed chemotherapeutic agents in a human leukemia cell line. 170 67
Among the cytostatic drugs only the alkylating agents have been firmly established as being leukaemogenic. This report describes 4 cases of acute myeloid leukaemia and 1 of myelodysplasia occurring in a cohort of 212 patients with germ-cell tumours treated with etoposide, cisplatin, and bleomycin. The mean cumulative risk of leukaemic complications was 4.7% (SE 2.3) 5.7 years after start of etoposide-containing chemotherapy, and, compared with the risk in the general population, the relative risk of overt
leukaemia
was 336 (95% CI 92-861). No leukaemias were detected in a previous cohort of 127 patients with germ-cell tumours treated with cisplatin, bleomycin, and vinblastine. The increased risk of
leukaemia
was most probably due to etoposide alone or in combination with cisplatin or bleomycin, since other published work has also not revealed an excess of leukaemias among patients with germ-cell tumours treated with only cisplatin, bleomycin, and vinblastine. The risk of
leukaemia
was dose related since all 5 patients with leukaemic complications were among the 82 who had received a cumulative dose of more than 2000 mg/m2 etoposide, whereas no leukaemias were observed among 130 patients who had received up to 2000 mg/m2 (p = 0.004). 3 of the leukaemic patients had balanced chromosome translocations affecting bands 11q23 and 21q22. These translocations, and perhaps also other balanced aberrations, seem to be characteristic of myelodysplasia and acute
leukaemia
occurring after therapy with cytostatic agents acting on DNA-
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Increased risk of myelodysplasia and leukaemia after etoposide, cisplatin, and bleomycin for germ-cell tumours. 168 78
Cytotoxic effects and
topoisomerase
II-mediated DNA breaks induced in vitro by ellipticine derivatives were examined in connection with 1H NMR and circular dichroism (CD) studies on molecular structures and interactions of drugs with DNA. The compounds included four 9-hydroxyellipticine and two 7-hydroxyisoellipticine derivatives. Structure-activity relationships indicated that a change in nitrogen atom position in the pyridinic ring greatly affected drug effects both on
topoisomerase
II action and cytotoxicity to L1210 cells. The four 9-hydroxyellipticine derivatives yielded bell-shaped curves in in vitro
topoisomerase
II-mediated DNA break assays, whereas the two 7-hydroxyisoellipticine derivatives demonstrated an almost linear increase at the same concentration (0-10 microM). In both cases, the intensity of cleavage was modulated by the position and the degree of methylation on the pyridinic ring, and results were correlated with cytotoxic activity expressed as the in vitro ID50 values for L1210
leukemia
cells. 1H NMR experiments performed on free drug molecules in solution revealed that the two protons (alpha and beta) contiguous to the biologically important hydroxy group were sensitive to changes in electron distribution produced by the distant chemical modifications and methylations of the pyridinic ring. A linear relationship was observed between the differences in chemical shifts of alpha and beta protons (delta delta alpha-beta) versus ID50 values. CD experiments indicated that, at weak ionic strength I = 0.02 and at pH 7, drugs interact with the poly[d(A-T)] duplex according to a "three-mode binding model" which is governed by the drug structure and the drug to DNA ratio. The intercalation mode was related to the induction of
topoisomerase
II-mediated DNA cleavage, while the external binding mode consecutive to intercalation was related to cleavage suppression. These two modes concerned the good intercalators 9-hydroxyellipticines. The third was found for the weak intercalators 7-hydroxyisoellipticines and was characterized by self-stacked molecules bound "outside" DNA, presumably in the minor groove. Ligands either could be intercalated partially or linked at the edge of bases with a small number of molecules filling intercalation sites, for the second alternative. In addition to having different binding modes, 9-hydroxyellipticines were better inducers of DNA distortions than 7-hydroxyisoellipticines. The incidence of the drug binding modes on DNA-
topoisomerase
II recognition was discussed in connection with the in vitro cytotoxic activity exhibited by the drugs.
...
PMID:DNA-drug recognition and effects on topoisomerase II-mediated cytotoxicity. A three-mode binding model for ellipticine derivatives. 184 65
DNA topoisomerase
inhibitors, camptothecin and 4'-demethylepipodophyllotoxin ethylidene-beta-D-glucoside (VP16) had strong differentiation-inducing activity for all five kinds of
leukemia
cells examined (human HL60, U937, ML1, and K562 cells and mouse M1 cells) as judged from measurements of various differentiation markers. The characteristics that appeared as a result of differentiation induced by these inhibitors were essentially similar in every cell line. Exposure to VP16 for 2 h induced both differentiation and DNA-strand breaks in K562 cells, whereas podophyllotoxin, which lacks
topoisomerase
II inhibitory activity, induced neither differentiation nor DNA-strand breaks in these cells. These results suggest a parallelism between the induction of differentiation and that of DNA-strand breaks. The combination of VP16 and recombinant tumor necrosis factor alpha (rTNF alpha) synergistically induced differentiation of human U937, ML1, and M1 cells and had an additive effect on HL60 cells. Simultaneous treatment with rTNF alpha plus camptothecin or VP16, or pretreatment with camptothecin or VP16, followed by rTNF alpha induced marked differentiation of M1 cells. These results indicate that inhibition of
topoisomerase
(either topoisomerase I or II) followed by the action of rTNF alpha was effective in inducing differentiation of
leukemia
cells.
...
PMID:Topoisomerase inhibitors have potent differentiation-inducing activity for human and mouse myeloid leukemia cells. 184 45
Since 1978, over 50 clinically useful antitumor drugs or new candidate antitumor agents have been evaluated in vivo against cisplatin-resistant P388
leukemia
(P388/DDPt) in our laboratories. Analysis of this data base has yielded insights into the cross-resistance, collateral sensitivity, and mechanisms of resistance of P388/DDPt. P388/DDPt was cross-resistant or marginally cross-resistant to eight agents [carmethizole.HCl, rhizoxin, dibromodulcitol, spirohydantoin mustard, hepsulfam, arabinosyl-5-azacytosine (ara-AC), tiazofurin, and deoxyspergualin]. Of these eight agents, the latter six have entered various phases of clinical trials. For these trials, it may be important to exclude or to monitor with extra care patients who have previously been treated with cisplatin. P388/DDPt was collaterally sensitive to six agents [fludarabine phosphate (2-F-ara-AMP), amsacrine (AMSA), mitoxantrone, etoposide (VP-16), batracylin, and flavone acetic acid] and, possibly, to two others (merbarone and echinomycin). These observations of collateral sensitivity suggest that a combination of cisplatin plus any one of these drugs might exhibit therapeutic synergism. Therapeutic synergism has been observed in animal models for combinations of cisplatin plus VP-16, AMSA, or mitoxantrone. The observation of collateral sensitivity for P388/DDPt to four agents (AMSA, mitoxantrone, merbarone, and VP-16) that have been reported to interact with
DNA topoisomerase II
suggests the possible involvement of the latter in cisplatin resistance. Both the increased sensitivity of P388/DDPt to these agents and a portion of its resistance to cisplatin could be the result of an increase in
DNA topoisomerase II
activity.
...
PMID:Antitumor drug cross-resistance in vivo in a cisplatin-resistant murine P388 leukemia. 184 65
The administration of the
DNA topoisomerase II
inhibitors 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) (10(-7) M), VP-16 (2 x 10(-7) M), or novobiocin (1.5 x 10(-4) M) reduces the growth activity of human promonocytic
leukemia
U-937 cells, by arresting them preferentially at the G2 (m-AMSA and VP-16) or at the G1 and G2 (novobiocin) phases of the cell cycle. Under these conditions, m-AMSA and VP-16 induce the differentiation of the cells efficiently, as proved both by an increase in the production of reactive oxygen species and by the activation of the surface expression of CD11b and CD11c, two differentiation-specific antigens. Novobiocin also induces the expression of those differentiation markers, but to a lesser extent. Analyses by Northern blot indicate that the
topoisomerase
II inhibitors reduce the levels of c-myc and beta-actin mRNA and increase the levels of vimentin mRNA. The expression of vimentin is also stimulated at the protein level, as indicated by immunofluorescence assays. This represents one of the few known instances in which
topoisomerase
inhibitors stimulate gene expression in eukaryotic cells.
...
PMID:Differentiation of human promonocytic leukemia U-937 cells with DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors: induction of vimentin gene expression. 185 89
HL-60/AMSA is a human
leukemia
cell line that is 50-100-fold more resistant than its drug-sensitive HL-60 parent line to the cytotoxic actions of the DNA intercalator amsacrine (m-AMSA). HL-60/AMSA
topoisomerase
II is also resistant to the inhibitory actions of m-AMSA. HL-60/AMSA cells and
topoisomerase
II are cross-resistant to anthracycline and ellipticine intercalators but relatively sensitive to the nonintercalating
topoisomerase
II reactive epipodophyllotoxin etoposide. We now demonstrate that HL-60/AMSA and its
topoisomerase
II are cross-resistant to the DNA intercalators mitoxantrone and amonafide, thus strongly indicating that HL-60/AMSA and its
topoisomerase
II are resistant to
topoisomerase
II reactive intercalators but not to nonintercalators. At high concentrations, mitoxantrone and amonafide were also found to inhibit their own, m-AMSA's, and etoposide's abilities to stabilize
topoisomerase
II-DNA complexes. This appears to be due to the ability of these concentrations of mitoxantrone and amonafide to inhibit
topoisomerase
II mediated DNA strand passage at a point in the topoisomerization cycle prior to the acquisition of the enzyme-DNA configuration that yields DNA cleavage and
topoisomerase
II-DNA cross-links. In addition, amonafide can inhibit the cytotoxic actions of m-AMSA and etoposide. Taken together, these results suggest that the cytotoxicity of m-AMSA and etoposide is initiated primarily by the stabilization of the
topoisomerase
II-DNA complex. Other
topoisomerase
II reactive drugs may inhibit the enzyme at other steps in the topoisomerization cycle, particularly at elevated concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cross-resistance of an amsacrine-resistant human leukemia line to topoisomerase II reactive DNA intercalating agents. Evidence for two topoisomerase II directed drug actions. 185 Feb 98
The in vitro effects of the 2-(arylmethylamino)-1,3-propanediols (AMAPs) on macromolecular synthesis have been examined using the murine
leukemia
, P388, and the human mammary adenocarcinoma, MCF-7, under conditions of short-term drug exposure. AMAPs that were observed to inhibit macromolecular synthesis produced nearly equipotent inhibition of DNA and RNA synthesis. Equivalent inhibition of protein synthesis generally required significantly greater concentrations of AMAP. There is a general correlation between inhibition of polynucleotide synthesis and in vivo antitumor activity. The effects of four clinical candidate AMAPs (crisnatol, 773U82, 502U83, and 7U85) on macromolecular synthesis were further compared with those of actinomycin D, doxorubicin, mitoxantrone, etoposide, amsacrine, and cisplatin in MCF-7 cells. The pattern of AMAP action was most similar to that observed for doxorubicin and mitoxantrone. Finally, the effects of these four AMAPs on the size, specific activity, and rate of incorporation of [3H]-dTTP into DNA of MCF-7 cells synchronized by pretreatment with hydroxyurea was determined. It was found that DNA synthesis was inhibited by AMAPs independent of inhibition of the uptake, phosphorylation, or retention of the metabolic precursors. These results support the theory that antitumor AMAPs interfere with the normal functioning of enzymes, such as
topoisomerase
II or DNA and RNA polymerases, which interact with DNA.
...
PMID:Effects of isomeric 2-(arylmethylamino)-1,3-propanediols (AMAPs) and clinically established agents on macromolecular synthesis in P388 and MCF-7 cells. 187 97
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