IntroductionTranscriptional regulation of major hematopoietic oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes represents a critical step in tumor formation, tumor aggressiveness, and therapy resistance. [1][2][3] In addition, a posttranscriptional inhibitory mechanism involving microRNA (miRNA) binding to the 3Ј-untranslated region of target mRNAs causes transcript degradation or interferes with the translation initiation and has been linked to tumorigenesis. 4,5 Under physiologic conditions, miRNAs regulate developmental processes and cell fate decisions, and tight regulation of their levels represents an important factor in cell and tissue homeostasis. 6 MiR-155, a well-studied miRNA, regulates hematopoietic cell development as documented by murine gene targeting experiments and also by other studies describing its function during immune B-and T-cell response, in production of cytokines and antibodies and in antigen presentation. 7,8 Next, transgenic miR-155 overexpression in the mouse stimulates B-cell proliferation and frequent development of lymphomas. 9 In humans, miR-155 up-regulation has been repeatedly reported in chronic B-cell lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), in its solid indolent form of a small lymphocytic lymphoma [10][11][12] and also in aggressive types, including non-Hodgkin 10,13,14 and Hodgkin lymphomas. 13,15 Deregulation of several microRNAs was repeatedly described in B-CLL. 16,17 B-CLL, the most common adult leukemia, is characterized by clonal accumulation of B celllike mature-appearing elements (Ͼ 5000/L) 18 typically coexpressing the CD5, CD19, CD20, and CD23 surface markers. B-CLL represents a heterogeneous disease, the outcome of which may be predicted by the levels of surface protein CD38, intracellular tyrosine kinase ZAP70, or by a status of IgV H somatic hypermutation. 18,19 Cytogenetic alterations of 2 loci that contain the p53 gene (deletion of 17p) and the ATM gene (deletion of 11q) are associated with poor prognosis, shorter duration of remission, and shortest overall survival, 20 whereas normal karyotype or trisomy 12 is considered intermediate risk and the 13q14 deletion is considered a favorable mark. Subsets of B-CLL patients may progress to non-Hodgkin diffuse large B-cell lymphoma by a mechanism that remains largely unknown. Taken together, miR-155 appears to play a central role in B-cell function, and its up-regulation in lymphoproliferative disorders, including B-CLL, may lead to a block of differentiation and accumulation of lymphoid-like cells.Recent studies brought evidence of a context-dependent transcriptional regulation of the MIR155HG. First, oncogenic properties of miR-155 have been demonstrated in breast cancer cells where MIR155HG is up-regulated by transforming growth factor-/ Smad pathway involving a Smad response element at the position Ϫ454 nt from the transcription start site (TSS). 21 This regulatory pathway becomes disabled on inhibition of miR-155, resulting in derepression of miR-155 targets (including the RhoA protein) and in decreased cell migration and invasio...
Purpose: Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an aggressive subtype of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas characterized by (over)expression of BCL2. A BCL2-targeting drug, venetoclax, has promising anticancer activity in MCL. We analyzed molecular mechanisms of venetoclax resistance in MCL cells and tested strategies to overcome it. Experimental Design: We confirmed key roles of proapoptotic proteins BIM and NOXA in mediating venetoclaxinduced cell death in MCL. Both BIM and NOXA are, however, differentially expressed in cell lines compared with primary cells. First, NOXA protein is significantly overexpressed in most MCL cell lines. Second, deletions of BIM gene harbored by three commonly used MCL cell lines (JEKO-1, MINO, and Z138) were not found by array comparative genomic hybridization using a validation set of 24 primary MCL samples. Results: We demonstrated that MCL1 andNOXA playimportant roles in mediating resistance to venetoclax. Consequently, we tested an experimental treatment strategy based on cotargeting BCL2 with venetoclax and MCL1 with a highly specific small-molecule MCL1 inhibitor S63845. The combination of venetoclax and S63845 demonstrated synthetic lethality in vivo on a panel of five patient-derived xenografts established from patients with relapsed MCL with adverse cytogenetics. Conclusions: Our data strongly support investigation of venetoclax in combination with S63845 as an innovative treatment strategy for chemoresistant MCL patients with adverse cytogenetics in the clinical grounds.
The results of repeated interphase fluorescence in-situ hybridization (I-FISH, FISH) examination of 97 CLL patients and correlation of these findings with IgVH hypermutation status, ZAP-70 and CD38 expression are presented. The appearance of new, FISH-detectable, genomic aberrations during disease course, described as clonal evolution (CE), was observed in 26% of patients. The most frequent newly acquired cytogenetic abnormality was 13q deletion in 64% (16/25). In contrast to earlier studies, there was no correlation found between CE and either one of single negative prognostic factors (unmutated IgVH; CD38 positivity; ZAP-70 positivity). However, the combination of all three negative factors correlated with CE highly significantly (p=0.005) and moreover, also with a shift from lower to higher FISH risk category (p=0.010). As the prognostic data were known in all patients, this study represents the complete insight on the association of CE and other risk parameters in CLL.
Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a subtype of B-cell lymphoma with a large number of recurrent cytogenetic/molecular aberrations. Approximately 5–10% of patients do not respond to frontline immunochemotherapy. Despite many useful prognostic indexes, a reliable marker of chemoresistance is not available. We evaluated the prognostic impact of seven recurrent gene aberrations including tumor suppressor protein P53 (TP53) and cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 2A (CDKN2A) in the cohort of 126 newly diagnosed consecutive MCL patients with bone marrow involvement ≥5% using fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH) and next-generation sequencing (NGS). In contrast to TP53, no pathologic mutations of CDKN2A were detected by NGS. CDKN2A deletions were found exclusively in the context of other gene aberrations suggesting it represents a later event (after translocation t(11;14) and aberrations of TP53, or ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)). Concurrent deletion of CDKN2A and aberration of TP53 (deletion and/or mutation) represented the most significant predictor of short EFS (median 3 months) and OS (median 10 months). Concurrent aberration of TP53 and CDKN2A is a new, simple, and relevant index of chemoresistance in MCL. Patients with concurrent aberration of TP53 and CDKN2A should be offered innovative anti-lymphoma therapy and upfront consolidation with allogeneic stem cell transplantation.
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