Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Wilms' tumor gene WT1 is highly expressed in leukemias and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), and WT1 expression levels increase along with the disease progression in chronic myeloid leukemia and MDS. We previously reported that IgM and IgG WT1 antibodies were detected with significantly higher detection rate and antibody titers in leukemias and MDS compared to those in healthy volunteers. In this study, whether IgG humoral immune responses against WT1 protein were Th1- or Th2-type were determined by measurement of four subclasses of IgG WT1 antibody, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, and IgG4. In leukemias and MDS, Th1-type WT1 antibodies such as IgG1, IgG2, and IgG3 were significantly increased in both detection rate and antibody titers compared to those in healthy volunteers, whereas Th2-type WT1 antibody such as IgG4 did not increase. These results showed that Th1-biased humoral immune responses against WT1 protein were generated in leukemias and MDS. These results should allow us to consider that Th1-biased cellular immune responses against WT1 protein, which was essentially needed for cancer immunotherapy targeting WT1, should be elicited in patients with hematopoietic malignancies.
Leukemia 2005 Feb
PMID:Th1-biased humoral immune responses against Wilms tumor gene WT1 product in the patients with hematopoietic malignancies. 1553 7

Deregulated expression of the Wilms' tumor gene (WT1) has been implicated in the maintenance of a malignant phenotype in leukemias and a wide range of solid tumors through interference with normal signaling in differentiation and apoptotic pathways. Expression of high levels of WT1 is associated with poor prognosis in leukemias and breast cancer. Using real-time (Taqman) reverse transcription-PCR and RNase protection assay, we have shown up-regulation of WT1 expression following cytotoxic treatment of cells exhibiting drug resistance, a phenomenon not seen in sensitive cells. WT1 is subject to alternative splicing involving exon 5 and three amino acids (KTS) at the end of exon 9, producing four major isoforms. Exon 5 splicing was disrupted in all cell lines studied following a cytotoxic insult probably due to increased exon 5 skipping. Disruption of exon 5 splicing may be a proapoptotic signal because specific targeting of WT1 exon 5-containing transcripts using a nuclease-resistant antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) killed HL60 leukemia cells, which were resistant to an ASO targeting all four alternatively spliced transcripts simultaneously. K562 cells were sensitive to both target-specific ASOs. Gene expression profiling following treatment with WT1 exon 5-targeted antisense showed up-regulation of the known WT1 target gene, thrombospondin 1, in HL60 cells, which correlated with cell death. In addition, novel potential WT1 target genes were identified in each cell line. These studies highlight a new layer of complexity in the regulation and function of the WT1 gene product and suggest that antisense directed to WT1 exon 5 might have therapeutic potential.
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PMID:Disruption of WT1 gene expression and exon 5 splicing following cytotoxic drug treatment: antisense down-regulation of exon 5 alters target gene expression and inhibits cell survival. 1554 86

The tumor suppressor gene wt1 (Wilms tumor 1) encodes a zinc finger transcription factor reported to be expressed in many tumors, including mesotheliomas, carcinomas, and acute leukemias. However, WT1 expression in non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) has not been studied. The authors assessed for WT1 expression in six lymphoma/leukemia cell lines using Western blot methods after subcellular fractionation. We also assessed for WT1 expression in 167 NHLs using immunohistochemical methods. The B-cell NHLs analyzed were 18 diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, 13 marginal zone B-cell lymphomas, 9 small lymphocytic lymphomas, (DLBCLs), 8 follicular lymphomas, 6 mantle cell lymphomas, 5 Burkitt lymphomas, 3 lymphoplasmacytic lymphomas, and 2 B-cell lymphoblastic lymphomas. The T-cell NHLs analyzed were 43 anaplastic large cell lymphomas (ALCLs), 26 peripheral T-cell lymphomas unspecified, 13 angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphomas, 6 cutaneous ALCLs, 6 cases of mycosis fungoides, 5 extranodal NK/T-cell lymphomas of nasal type, and 4 T-cell lymphoblastic lymphomas. WT1 levels were higher in cytoplasmic extracts than in nuclear extracts of the Karpas 299 and SU-DHL-1 lymphoma cell lines but were higher in nuclear extracts than in the cytoplasmic extracts of the Jurkat, HH, U-937, and K562 leukemia cell lines. In NHLs, WT1 was positive in 4 of 5 (80%) Burkitt lymphomas, 9 of 12 (75%) ALK-positive ALCLs, 3 of 6 (50%) lymphoblastic lymphomas (2 of 4 T-cell, 1 of 2 B-cell), 14 of 31 (45%) ALK-negative ALCLs, 6 of 18 (33%) DLBCLs, and 1 of 6 (17%) cutaneous ALCLs. WT1 was negative in all other NHLs tested. WT1 immunoreactivity was primarily cytoplasmic in all positive NHLs except T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma. In conclusion, WT1 protein is frequently detected in the cytoplasm of a subset of high-grade NHLs.
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PMID:Differential expression of WT1 gene product in non-Hodgkin lymphomas. 1589 24

Relapse postautograft in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), may in part arise from leukaemia cells present in the bone marrow (BM) inoculum, and the level of minimal residual disease (MRD) in BM harvests used for autografting may therefore be clinically important. We have used the WT1 transcript as a marker of MRD, which was quantitated by RQ-PCR, in the BM harvests of 24 patients receiving an ABMT for AML. ABL was used as a control gene with WT1 level being normalised to 10(5) copies of ABL per sample. Median WT1 level was 651 copies (range=113-32 700) for the 13 patients with relapse-free survival (RFS) of less than 5 years, and 174 (range=0-1900) for patients with RFS of over 5 years postautograft (P<0.04). The RFS was 10.5 months for patients with WT1 level of >2000 copies (n=5), and has not yet been reached for patients with WT1 level<2000 (n=21), at a median follow-up of 92 months (P<0.05). We show that elevated levels of MRD in BM harvests are associated with a higher relapse risk in patients autografted for AML.
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PMID:Elevated levels of WT1 transcripts in bone marrow harvests are associated with a high relapse risk in patients autografted for acute myeloid leukaemia. 1590 82

WT1 has been implicated in human leukemia and hematopoiesis, but its role in stem cell differentiation is not yet fully defined. We show that Wt1-null murine fetal liver cells are capable of reconstituting functional hematopoiesis following transplantation into irradiated recipients. There was also no significant difference between the in vitro colony-forming ability of wild-type and Wt1-null cells. Using a reporter gene assay in a transgenic mouse system, expression from the WT1 promoter was detectable in adult bone marrow, but undetectable in subsets of different hematopoietic cells. We conclude that Wt1 is not essential for murine hematopoiesis and that there may be significant differences in its role between mouse and man.
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PMID:Wt1 is not essential for hematopoiesis in the mouse. 1592 76

Identification of tumor-associated Ags is a prerequisite for vaccine-based and adoptive immune therapies. Some tumor-associated Ags elicit specific CD8 T cells in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Here, we characterized ex vivo responses of CD8 T cells from CML patients to extrajunction bcr-abl peptides and telomerase 540-548 hTert, PR1, and WT1 peptides. CML-specific CD8 T cells were present in most treated patients and were usually multiepitopic: WT1, hTert, PR1, and bcr74 tetramer(+) cells were detected in 85, 82, 67, and 61% of patients, respectively. The breadth and magnitude of these responses did not differ significantly according to treatment or disease status. CML-specific tetramer(+) CD8 T cells had a predominantly memory phenotype, an intermediate perforin content, and low intracellular IFN-gamma accumulation in the presence of the relevant peptide. However, in short-term culture with HLA-matched leukemia cells, the patients' memory T cells were specifically reactivated to become IFN-gamma-producing effector cells, suggesting that CD8 T cell precursors with lytic potential are present in vivo and can be activated by appropriate stimulation. In conclusion, this study shows that multiepitopic tumor-specific CD8 T cell responses occur naturally in most CML patients, opening the way to new strategies for enhancing anti-CML immunity, in particular in patients with minimal residual disease.
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PMID:Ex vivo characterization of multiepitopic tumor-specific CD8 T cells in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia: implications for vaccine development and adoptive cellular immunotherapy. 1594 30

The Wilms' tumor gene WT1 is overexpressed in leukemia and various types of solid cancers and its product is a tumor rejection antigen. A phase I clinical trials of WT1 peptide-based cancer immunotherapy were performed with good clinical response but with only skin reaction at the injection sites of WT1 vaccine. Thus, WT1-targeting immunotherapy should be promissing.
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PMID:[WT1 peptide-based immunotherapy]. 1594 98

De novo epigenetic changes at histone and DNA level that affect gene transcription in cancer may be less random than we originally thought. Leukemia fusion proteins associated with specific chromosome translocations could mechanistically determine the epigenetic fate of specific target genes critical for normal hematopoiesis. This seems to be the case with AML1-MTG16, a fusion protein resulting from the t(16;21) translocation, a hallmark of therapy-related leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome. Here we show that AML1-MTG16 blocks both myeloid differentiation and proliferation in the 32D/WT1-mouse myeloid cell line. These biological effects can be traced to the AML1 and MTG16 moieties of the fusion protein, respectively. Further, we show that AML1-MTG16 can induce epigenetic repressive changes at the histone and DNA level of the AML1 target gene Csf1r (c-fms), encoding the macrophage colony stimulating factor receptor. We observed that, concomitant with Csf1r downregulation, 32D/WT1 cells lost the ability to undergo myeloid differentiation in response to the granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Thus, there seems to be an association between AML1-MTG16-induced myeloid maturation block and epigenetic changes of a myeloid master gene.
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PMID:Myeloid maturation block by AML1-MTG16 is associated with Csf1r epigenetic downregulation. 1600 22

To elucidate the expression of WT1 in all types of leukemias and its implications for monitoring minimal residual disease in patients with acute leukemia, the peripheral blood from 55 leukemia patients and 10 normal voluteer was detected by using FQ-RT-PCR. Follow-up monitoring of WT1 expression of peripheral blood was performed for 20 patients with acute leukemia. The results showed that the expression of WT1 gene in all types of leukemias was significantly higher than that in normal control (P < 0.001). For ANLL and ALL patients, the survival time in the group of WT1 <or= 6.8 x 10(-3) was longer than that in the group of WT1 > 6.8 x 10(-3), (P = 0.027). Follow-up detection of the expression of WT1 in peripheral blood samples from 20 acute leukemia patients, 7 cases relapsed after complete remission has been done. In 5 of 7 relapsed patients, the expression of WT1 had obviously increased about 2 - 3 months before clinical relapse became apparent. It is concluded that the established FQ-RT-PCR method is accurate and specific. The expression of WT1 gene is relatively high in all types of leukemias compared with normal peripheral blood cells, the higher WT1 expression may associate with poor prognosis in acute leukemia, and the dynamics of WT1 level correlate with the disease status. The quantitative assessment of WT1 expression in peripheral blood samples by FQ-RT-PCR may be a useful tool for monitoring minimal residual disease.
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PMID:[Fluorescence quantitative PCR detection of WT1 gene expression in peripheral blood of patients with acute leukemias and its clinical implications]. 1612 44

Genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism analysis has revealed large-scale cryptic regions of acquired homozygosity in the form of segmental uniparental disomy in approximately 20% of acute myeloid leukemias. We have investigated whether such regions, which are the consequence of mitotic recombination, contain homozygous mutations in genes known to be mutational targets in leukemia. In 7 of 13 cases with uniparental disomy, we identified concurrent homozygous mutations at four distinct loci (WT1, FLT3, CEBPA, and RUNX1). This implies that mutation precedes mitotic recombination which acts as a "second hit" responsible for removal of the remaining wild-type allele, as has recently been shown for the JAK2 gene in myeloproliferative disorders.
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PMID:Association between acquired uniparental disomy and homozygous gene mutation in acute myeloid leukemias. 1623 Mar 71


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