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Title: Targeting of PML/RARalpha is lethal to retinoic acid-resistant promyelocytic leukemia cells. Author: Nason-Burchenal K, Allopenna J, Bègue A, Stéhelin D, Dmitrovsky E, Martin P. Journal: Blood; 1998 Sep 01; 92(5):1758-67. PubMed ID: 9716606. Abstract: Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cells, containing the t(15;17) rearrangement, express the fusion protein, PML/RARalpha. Clinically, patients respond to all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) through complete remissions associated with myeloid maturation of leukemic cells. This clinical ATRA response of APL is linked to PML/RARalpha expression. Unfortunately, these remissions are transient and relapsed APL is often ATRA-resistant. The role PML/RARalpha plays in the growth and maturation of these APL cells with acquired ATRA resistance has not been fully explored. This study uses an ATRA-resistant NB4 cell line (NB4-R1) to investigate the contribution of PML/RARalpha expression to ATRA resistance. Targeting of PML/RARalpha in NB4-R1 cells was undertaken using two approaches: homologous recombination and hammerhead ribozyme-mediated cleavage. Reducing PML/RARalpha protein in NB4-R1 cells rendered these cells more sensitive to ATRA. These cells were growth-inhibited in ATRA, apoptosis was induced, and there was no apparent signaling of differentiation. Sequence analysis identified a mutation in the ligand binding domain (LBD) of the RARalpha portion of PML/RARalpha. Results show that these retinoid-resistant NB4 cells require persistent PML/RARalpha expression for leukemic cell growth. Taken together, these findings can account for why these cells do not respond to ATRA and how reduction of PML/RARalpha abrogates the antiapoptotic effect it confers to these leukemic cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]