Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023473 (chronic myeloid leukemia)
18,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We examined the effect of hemin, TGF-beta1 and cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) on the levels of mRNAs for the erythroid-specific 5-aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS-E) and gamma-globin in various human myelogenous leukemia cell lines. Detailed analyses were also made using one of them, YN-1, which was isolated and established in culture from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia. Our results demonstrate that gamma-globin protein level and the percentage of benzidine-positive cells in the cell line increased markedly (10- to 30-fold) upon treatment with hemin, TGF-beta1, or Ara-C. In contrast, gamma-globin mRNA was already markedly expressed prior to treatment in 4 out of 9 cell lines examined, including YN-1, and the level increased only marginally after treatment with hemin. ALAS-E mRNA levels were increased in YN-1 cells after treatment with TGF-beta1 and Ara-C, while hemin treatment had little effect. These results indicate that heme supply is insufficient in YN-1 cells and suggest that hemin increases hemoglobin synthesis principally at the post-transcriptional level, whereas TGF-beta1 and Ara-C stimulate hemoglobin synthesis by activating efficient endogenous heme supply in the cells.
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PMID:5-Aminolevulinate synthase expression and hemoglobin synthesis in a human myelogenous leukemia cell line. 913 17

Homoharringtonine (HHT) is a cephalotaxine alkaloid that showed clinical efficacy in the chronic phase of chronic myeloid leukemia (Ph1+CML). As a single agent, it resulted in effectively controlling leukocytosis and in producing sporadic karyotypic conversions; its clinical use in combination with interferon (IFN-alpha) for the treatment of CML could thus be considered. In this study we evaluated the growth inhibition and the induction of apoptosis determined by HHT alone and in combination with IFN-alpha and cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) on normal and CML (both in chronic, CML-CP and in blastic phase; CML-BP) hematopoietic progenitors. HHT is able to determine a dose-dependent cell growth inhibition; evaluation of cytotoxic activity on semisolid cultures showed an activity significantly higher on CML-CP than on normal cells (P = 0.02 for HHT 50 ng/ml and P = 0.01 for HHT 200 ng/ml). HHT exerted a synergistic effect with IFN-alpha, Ara-C and IFN-alpha + Ara-C in inhibiting CML-CP colony growth; the same activity was demonstrated by the combination of HHT with Ara-C and by the triple combination, but not by HHT + IFN-alpha, on normal myeloid progenitors. The triple combination only was able to exert a synergistic effect in CML-BP. The induction of apoptosis resulted HHT dose-dependent in CML-CP and normals; at higher drug concentrations (100-200-1000 ng/ml), HHT induced a significant increase of apoptotic cells (for normals: P = 0.04, P = 0.02 and P = 0.04; for CML-CP: P = 0.01, P = 0.01 and P = 0.04, respectively); no significant changes were observed in CML-BP. In conclusion, the differences in cytotoxic effect and apoptosis induction observed, depending on the various phases of CML, add experimental evidence to the different clinical results between the chronic phase, where the clone is responsive to HHT, and the acute phase, where the drug is ineffective. The in vitro synergism of HHT with Ara-C and IFN-alpha in CML-CP suggests further evaluation in the clinical setting.
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PMID:Effects of homoharringtonine alone and in combination with alpha interferon and cytosine arabinoside on 'in vitro' growth and induction of apoptosis in chronic myeloid leukemia and normal hematopoietic progenitors. 918 Feb 82

The aim of this analysis was to evaluate the efficacy of alpha-interferon (alpha-IFN) regimens in late chronic phase (diagnosis >12 months) chronic myelogenous leukemia (CP-CML). Long-term follow-up results were evaluated in 137 patients with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive late CP-CML. The alpha-IFN programs were sequential studies with human leukocyte alpha-IFN (seven patients), recombinant alpha-IFN alone (15 patients) or with IFN-gamma (29 patients), hydroxyurea (HU) (19 patients), or low-dose cytarabine (Ara-C) (67 patients). Overall, 57% of the patients achieved complete hematological response (CHR), and 7% obtained partial hematological response. Nineteen patients (15% of the 123 evaluable patients) had a cytogenetic response which was major (Ph-positive <35%) in 10 patients (8%). A trend for better responses was observed with shorter disease duration. The median overall survival from start of therapy was 49 months, with an estimated 5-year survival rate of 41%. Some common pretreatment prognostic factors associated with response did not show statistical associations when applied in late CP-CML; however, characteristics such as smaller spleen size, and lower percentages of peripheral blood and marrow blasts and basophils were associated with better survival experience. When patients were subgrouped according to risk, no significant differences in the incidence of cytogenetic response and in survival outcomes were observed among various risk groups. This study confirms that alpha-IFN-based regimens have a modest activity in late CP-CML, and supports the need to develop investigational strategies aimed at improving patient prognosis in this phase.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up results of alpha-interferon-based regimens in patients with late chronic phase chronic myelogenous leukemia. 932 78

Syndrome of abnormal chromatin clumping in leucocytes syndrome (ACCLS) is an uncommon entity which shares clinical and biological features with the myelodysplastic (MDS) and chronic myeloproliferative syndrome. In fact, as some authors consider ACCLS a new type of MDS, others maintain that it is in Ph'negative/bcr-abl negative chronic myeloid leukaemia. A new case of ACCLS appeared in a 68 year old woman, who presented with anaemic symptoms, bleeding and recurrent infections, and a haematological picture including progressive macrocytic anemia, thrombocytopenia and leuco-erythroblastosis. Marrow hypercellularity with granulocytic hyperplasia, and mature granulocytes presenting nuclear hyposegmentation and large peripheral blocks of chromatin separated by clear zones were the characteristic features of this case. No cytogenetic abnormalities were found and DNA flow-cytometry content was normal (euploid), supporting the thought that a disequilibrium exists in the hetero-chromatin/eucromatin ration in AACLS. Reverse PCR for bcr-abl transcripts was negative. The cell-cycle-phase analysis showed a high fraction of S-cells in the bone marrow (27%) in contrast to a very low S-phase (0.2%) in the peripheral blood, pattern that is different from both CMML and CML. In vitro clonogenic assays showed a high colony forming capacity and a certain grade of autonomous proliferation of the bone marrow cells, which is reminiscent of the CMML growth behaviour in culture. The patient was treated with vitamin D3, low dose Ara-C, prednisone and hydroxyurea until her demise, fifteen months after diagnosis. In total, the patient received 47 units of packed cells and 114 of platelet concentrates, and was transfused only when she presented anaemic or hemorrhagic symptoms. These clinical and haematological features suggest that ACCLS is a distinct entity that should be considered a sixth type of MDS, beside CMML, with which it has much in common.
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PMID:[Syndrome of abnormal chromatin clumping in leucocytes with a high fraction of bone marrow cells in S-phase and in vitro autonomous growth]. 937 66

Bcr-Abl expression in leukemic cells is known to exert a potent effect against apoptosis due to antileukemic drugs, but its mechanism has not been elucidated. Recent reports have indicated that a variety of apoptotic stimuli cause the preapoptotic mitochondrial release of cytochrome c (cyt c) into cytosol, which mediates the cleavage and activity of caspase-3 involved in the execution of apoptosis. Whether Bcr-Abl exerts its antiapoptotic effect upstream to the cleavage and activation of caspase-3 or acts downstream by blocking the ensuing degradation of substrates resulting in apoptosis, has been the focus of the present studies. In these, we used (1) the human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) HL-60 cells that are stably transfected with the bcr-abl gene (HL-60/Bcr-Abl) and express p185 Bcr-Abl; and (2) the chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)-blast crisis K562 cells, which have endogenous expression of p210 Bcr-Abl. Exposure of the control AML HL-60 cells to high-dose Ara-C (HIDAC), etoposide, or sphingoid bases (including C2 ceramide, sphingosine, or sphinganine) caused the accumulation of cyt c in the cytosol, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and increase in the reactive oxygen species (ROS). These preapoptotic events were associated with the cleavage and activity of caspase-3, resulting in the degradation of poly (adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and DNA fragmentation factor (DFF), internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, and morphologic features of apoptosis. In contrast, in HL-60/Bcr-Abl and K562 cells, these apoptotic stimuli failed to cause the cytosolic accumulation of cyt c and other associated mitochondrial perturbations, as well as the failure to induce the activation of caspase-3 and apoptosis. While the control HL-60 cells showed high levels of Bcl-2 and barely detectable Bcl-xL, HL-60/Bcr-Abl cells expressed high levels of Bcl-xL and undetectable levels of Bcl-2, a pattern of expression similar to the one in K562 cells. Bax and caspase-3 expressions were not significantly different between HL-60/Bcr-Abl or K562 versus HL-60 cells. These findings indicate that Bcr-Abl expression blocks apoptosis due to diverse apoptotic stimuli upstream by preventing the cytosolic accumulation of cyt c and other preapoptotic mitochondrial perturbations, thereby inhibiting the activation of caspase-3 and execution of apoptosis.
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PMID:Bcr-Abl exerts its antiapoptotic effect against diverse apoptotic stimuli through blockage of mitochondrial release of cytochrome C and activation of caspase-3. 947 36

Between February 1993 and November 1997, 62 patients with severe aplastic anaemia (SAA), acute myeloid (AML), acute lymphoid (ALL), or chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) as well as two patients with NHL underwent allogeneic marrow transplantation (BMT) from HLA-identical or one-antigen mismatched sibling or unrelated donors. Patients received preparative regimens according to the baseline disease. Patients with SAA were conditioned with ATG/Cy (2 cases) and TAI/Cy (3 cases), AML, ALL and NHL with TBI/Cy (21 cases including two retransplantations) and CML with Mitobronitol/Ara-C/Cy except two patients conditioned traditionally with Bu/Cy. For GVHD prevention, patients received cyclosporin-A (CsA) with short course methotheraxe according to the Seattle protocol. Significantly better overall survival rates were associated with the Mitobronitol (DBM)/Ara-C/Cy conditioning regarded the patients as a whole. Autologous stem cell transplantation (bone marrow and/or peripheral blood) were performed in ten cases including 2 AML, 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), 3 Hodgkin's disease (HD) and 1 patient with multiple myeloma (MM). Patients with AML and two patients with NHL were conditioned with TBI/Cy and the others with BEAM combined chemotherapy. Eight out of ten patients are leukaemia- or lymphoma-free survivors. One patient relapsed having conventional chemotherapy and interferon maintenance therapy. One patient died in a rapid relapse five months post-BMT.
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PMID:Haemopoietic cell transplantation activity and results: a single institution experience. 991 38

Thirty-one patients (20 male and 11 female; median age 51 years (16-79)) with high-risk acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) (20 refractory AML and 11 secondary AML (s-AML) (four to myelodysplastic syndrome, five to chemo/radiotherapy, one to aplastic anemia and one blastic chronic myelogenous leukemia (B-CML)) were treated with CBDCA (300 mg/m2/day x 5 days in continuous i.v. infusion) plus intermediate-dose Ara-C (500 mg/m2/day x 3 days in rapid i.v. infusion). Nine patients (29%) achieved CR (five s-AML (three myelodysplastic syndromes, one CML and one ALL) and four refractory AML) and 11 patients had resistant disease. There were 11 early deaths (35%). Median disease-free survival of the nine responders was 4 months. The main toxicity was hematological, febrile episodes took place in nearly all the patients (96%). The CBDCA plus Ara-C regimen showed an evident antileukemic activity in high-risk leukemia. However, the lack of long-term disease-free survivors shows the need for innovative postremission strategies. The high initial response rate seen in AML secondary to myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) warrants further investigation of CBDCA in combination regimens for MDS patients.
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PMID:Carboplatin plus cytarabine in the treatment of high-risk acute myeloblastic leukemia. 1002 88

Three patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in blastic transformation were treated with G-CSF plus middle dose cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C). G-CSF was administered (150 mg, s.c. or 300 mg, d.i.v./day) 24 hr prior to Ara-C (2-3 g/body, 6 hour d.i.v. for 2-5 days) and continued until the peripheral neutrophil count rose above 1,000/microlitre. As a supplement, VP-16 (80 mg/m2, for 2 days) was administered as warranted to control the growth of blastic cells. All 3 patients survived for more than 12 months with a favorable performance status. Normal karyotypes were detected in 2 of the patients after chemotherapy. One of those patients in paticular demonstrated normal bone marrow findings with the almost complete disappearance of the Ph-positive clone. In vitro cultures of peroxidase-negative CML blastic cells revealed that G-CSF stimulated the induction of blastic cells into the cell cycle and that blastic cell apoptosis was more pronounced in cells cultured with G-CSF plus Ara-C than with G-CSF or Ara-C alone. G-CSF plus middle dose Ara-C therapy appears to be a strong candidate for the treatment of CML in blastic transformation with a poor prognosis.
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PMID:[Induction of Ph-negative normal clone and long-term survival by combined treatment with G-CSF plus middle dose cytosine arabinoside for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in blastic transformation]. 1002 46

Neurological side effects and complications of cryoglobulinemia were observed during interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) therapy in a patient with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). A 50-year-old man was hospitalized because of leukocytosis and extramedullary tumors in the lumbar spine. In addition, the patient complained of dysesthesia in his feet. A diagnosis of accelerated phase CML was made. Administration of prednisolone, vincristine, hydroxyurea, and Ara-C and irradiation of the lumbar spine were started. Two months later, the patients achieved hematologic response and the size of his tumors decreased. Thereafter, we started IFN-alpha treatment (3-6 x 10(6) units daily) by intramuscular injection. After 8 weeks of this treatment, the patient complained of worsening dysesthesia in his feet. An axonal form of peripheral neuropathy was diagnosed by electrophysiological examination. Immunological studies revealed decreased complement levels and type III mixed cryoglobulinemia. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy alleviated the neurological symptoms and lowered the cryoglobulin levels. The clinical course suggested that mixed cryoglobulinemia was associated with CML and that the increase in cryoglobulin levels was caused by IFN-alpha and played a causative role in the worsening peripheral neuropathy. Therefore, to prevent these side effects, careful clinical assessment is necessary before starting IFN-alpha therapy.
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PMID:[Development of cyroglobulinemia and polyneuropathy in a chronic myeloid leukemia patient during interferon-alpha treatment]. 1035 42

The clonogenic cells of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), unlike normal haemopoietic colony forming cells (CFC), are resistant to the growth inhibitory effects of the chemokine, macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha). Here, we tested the hypothesis that MIP-1alpha protects normal, but not CML, CFC from the cytotoxic effects of the cell-cycle active drug cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C). Using a 24-h Ara-C protection assay we showed that MIP-1alpha confers protection to normal CFC but also sensitizes CML CFC to Ara-C. The differential MIP-1alpha responsiveness was not due to a down-regulation of MIP-1alpha receptors on CML CD34+ cells as flow cytometric analysis showed similar binding of a biotinylated MIP-1alpha molecule to normal and CML CD34+ cells. Flow cytometric analysis of the MIP-1alpha receptor subtype CCR-5 revealed comparable CCR-5 expression levels on normal and CML CD34+ cells. Furthermore, culture of CD34+ cells for 10 h in the presence of TNF-alpha resulted in an increased MIP-1alpha receptor expression on both normal and CML CD34+ cells. Our data suggest that the unresponsiveness of CML CFC to the growth inhibitory effect of MIP-1alpha is not caused by a lack of MIP-1alpha receptor or total uncoupling of the MIP-1alpha responsiveness but may be due to an intracellular signalling defect downstream of the receptors.
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PMID:Characterisation of the differential response of normal and CML haemopoietic progenitor cells to macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha. 1060 23


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