Epigenetic 5-azacitidine (AZA) therapy of high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) represents a promising, albeit not fully understood, approach. Hematopoietic transcription factor PU.1 is dynamically regulated by upstream regulatory element (URE), whose deletion causes downregulation of PU.1 leading to AML in mouse. In this study a significant group of the high-risk MDS patients, as well as MDS cell lines, displayed downregulation of PU.1 expression within CD34 þ cells, which was associated with DNA methylation of the URE. AZA treatment in vitro significantly demethylated URE, leading to upregulation of PU.1 followed by derepression of its transcriptional targets and onset of myeloid differentiation. Addition of colony-stimulating factors (CSFs; granulocyte-CSF, granulocyte --macrophage-CSF and macrophage-CSF) modulated AZA-mediated effects on reprogramming of histone modifications at the URE and cell differentiation outcome. Our data collectively support the importance of modifying the URE chromatin structure as a regulatory mechanism of AZA-mediated activation of PU.1 and induction of the myeloid program in MDS.
Abstract. To date, approximately one half of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients do not have a suitable specific molecular marker for monitoring minimal residual disease (MRD). The Wilm's tumour gene (WT1) has been suggested as a possible molecular marker of MRD in AML. The expression of WT1 in peripheral blood (PB) was measured using quantitative real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction in peripheral leukocytes from 151 patients with AML at diagnosis. WT1 expression was significantly elevated, i.e. up to 3 orders of magnitude in the majority (80%) of AML patients at diagnosis compared to the PB of healthy donors. Sequence samples of the long-term followed-up AML patients treated with chemotherapy and/or allogeneic bone marrow transplantation were analysed for WT1 expression. The results revealed that the hematological relapses were preceded (median, 1.8 months) by an increase in WT1 gene expression. For the practical utility of this gene as a molecular marker of relapse, it was necessary to determine an upper remission limit, crossing which would signal hematological relapse. The upper remission limit was determined in our set of patients to be 0.02 WT1/ABL. The AML patients who consequently relapsed crossed this upper remission limit; however, those in permanent remission did not. Therefore, this upper remission limit could be taken as the border of molecular relapse of AML patients. Moreover, insufficient decline of WT1 expression under the upper remission limit following induction and/ or consolidation therapy was associated with markedly high risk of relapse. The results show that our upper remission limit can be taken as the border of molecular relapse of AML patients and WT1 levels following initial therapy as a beneficial prognostic marker.
The BCR/ABL rearrangement, the molecular hallmark of chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML), is rare in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), being detected in approximately 1% of cases. In the vast majority of CML cases the breakpoint on chromosome 22 falls in the so‐called major breakpoint cluster region of the BCR gene. Only a few cases of CML with breakpoint in the minor or in the micro bcr region have so far been reported. The micro breakpoint position has been associated mainly with a mild form of CML, defined as Philadelphia chromosome‐positive chronic neutrophilic leukaemia (Ph‐positive CNL). Using reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) we report a patient with an acute myeloid leukaemia phenotype at diagnosis who showed a BCR/ABL rearrangement with a breakpoint located in the micro bcr region (e19a2 junction). Cytogenetic analysis showed a progression of the malignant clone, finally leading to cells with two Ph chromosomes, trisomy 8, isochromosome 17q and deletion of the long arms of chromosome 7. The findings of chromosomal changes point to a possibility of blast crisis of CML with a clinically silent chronic phase. Immunoprecipitation and auto‐phosphorylation assay revealed the expression, by the patient's blast cells, of an abnormal P230 BCR/ABL protein, which showed for the first time that this protein was constitutively activated in primary cells from patients. This finding may contribute to the understanding of the role of the BCR/ABL rearrangements in determining different leukaemia phenotypes ranging from acute lymphoid and myeloid leukaemias to mild chronic neutrophilic leukaemias.
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