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Bone Marrow Microenvironment regulation of BCL6 in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

机译:急性淋巴细胞白血病中BCL6的骨髓微环境调节。

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摘要

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a hematological malignancy with approximately 6000 newly diagnosed cases every year. Although ALL is the most common malignancy in children, it can occur in patients of all ages. Great strides have been made in the treatment of ALL and remission rates are at all-time highs. However, relapse rates have remained relatively consistent, and relapse continues to be correlated with a poor prognosis in patients with ALL. As the site of origin and progression of ALL, the bone marrow microenvironment (BMM) is important in regulating tumor cell quiescence and proliferation. Of clinical relevance is the frequency with which quiescent leukemic cells survive treatment, initiate proliferation, and contribute to relapse of aggressive disease. In order to design innovative therapies, a better understanding of the mechanisms by which this regulation occurs is needed.;In order to investigate the mechanisms of BMM mediated protection, and to develop innovative targeted strategies to disrupt it, in vitro co-culture models remain critical. Classically, co-culture models that include hematopoietic cells have only investigated the tumor population as a whole, without regard for potential different phenotypes based on location of the leukemic cell relative to the adherent BMM cells. In the first study (Chapters 2 and 3), we investigated whether ALL cells have a variance in phenotype based on their spatial location within the co-culture. Utilizing bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC) and human osteoblasts (HOB) as representative elements of the BMM, in culture with ALL cells, we found that ALL cells form three distinct populations relative to the BMSC or HOB. ALL tumor cells that migrated beneath the stromal layer, referred to as phase dim (PD), were characterized by a quiescent and chemotherapy resistant phenotype. Cell labeling experiments demonstrated that the co-culture model was dynamic and that ALL cells readily transitioned between populations relative to the adherent BMM cells. Furthermore, co-culture studies using non-bone marrow derived adherent layers found that while these co-cultures supported formation of a PD population, they did not protect ALL cells from chemotherapy exposure. These results suggest that the increased chemotherapy resistance seen in the PD population is specific to the crosstalk between ALL cells and the BMSC or HOB. PD ALL cells were also seen to have an altered metabolic profile, which may contribute to their increased resistance to chemotherapy. Additionally, we provide a written and video protocol for the isolation of the three ALL populations from the stromal adherent layers. This extension of the standard co-culture model will provide researchers a more biologically relevant method to investigate resistant ALL disease in the context of BMM derived support.;In the final study (Chapter 4), data suggest that microenvironment regulation of BCL6 in leukemic cells is one factor involved in the transition between the proliferative and quiescent states of ALL. Observations utilizing Bcr-Abl negative (Ph-), positive (Ph+) ALL cell lines, and primary patient samples suggest that tumor cell BCL6 protein expression is decreased due to BMSC and HOB derived signals. Leukemic cells with decreased BCL6 are characterized by diminished proliferation, G0 accumulation, and chemotherapy resistance. Conversely, removal of ALL cells from marrow-derived stroma results in leukemic cells with increased BCL6 expression that are proliferative and sensitive to chemotherapy. Chemical inhibition or knock-down of BCL6 by shRNA in ALL cells results in diminished proliferation reminiscent of the quiescent tumor cells supported by the marrow microenvironment which are chemotherapy resistant and contribute to relapse of disease. We have developed a unique in vitro recovery model to test chemotherapy protection of tumor in this unique niche. BMSC/HOB co-cultured tumor cells are exposed to chemotherapy, and subsequently allowed to recover from drug imposed insult to determine factors important to tumor survival and repopulation. While down regulation of leukemic BCL6 leads to a quiescent phenotype, surviving leukemic cells released from microenvironment constraint have increased BCL6 expression and undergo a period of aggressive proliferation. Since many chemotherapy regimens require tumor cell proliferation for optimal efficacy, we investigated the consequences of forced BCL6 expression in leukemic cells when in the protective microenvironment niche. Data suggest that forcing leukemic cells to express BCL6 when co-cultured with BMSC or HOB sensitizes the tumor to chemotherapy induced cell death. Furthermore, pre-treatment with drugs that increase BCL6 expression such as the proteasome inhibitor MG132 or the ATM pathway inhibitor caffeine sensitize microenvironment protected ALL cells to chemotherapy treatment. These data suggest that BCL6 is one factor, modulated by microenvironment derived cues that may contribute to regulation of ALL cell cycle progression and subsequently therapeutic response.;The overall goal of the studies presented herein was to provide a platform to investigate treatment resistant ALL that is due to BMM support through the use of our in vitro co-culture model. Additionally, through the use of this model we are able to demonstrate mechanistic changes, which can lead to chemotherapy resistance such as downregulation of BCL6 in ALL subsequent to BMM interaction. These studies provide mechanistic insight that will contribute to the design of novel treatment strategies that disrupt protective microenvironment signaling, with a goal of increased chemotherapy efficacy and less intensive therapies for ALL patients. With a primary goal of reducing the frequency of relapse, a critical secondary advantage would be the reduction of long-term effects from cytotoxic therapies and potential reduction of treatment induced secondary malignancies.
机译:急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)是一种血液恶性肿瘤,每年约有6000例新诊断病例。尽管ALL是儿童中最常见的恶性肿瘤,但它可能发生在所有年龄段的患者中。 ALL治疗取得了长足的进步,缓解率达到了历史最高水平。然而,复发率一直保持相对稳定,复发仍与ALL患者的不良预后相关。作为ALL的起源和发展的部位,骨髓微环境(BMM)在调节肿瘤细胞的静止和增殖中很重要。与临床相关的是静态白血病细胞在治疗后存活,启动增殖并促进侵袭性疾病复发的频率。为了设计创新的疗法,需要对该调节发生的机理有更好的理解。;为了研究BMM介导的保护的机理,并开发出创新的靶向策略来破坏它,体外共培养模型仍然存在危急。经典地,包括造血细胞的共培养模型仅整体上研究了肿瘤种群,而不考虑基于白血病细胞相对于粘附的BMM细胞的位置的潜在的不同表型。在第一个研究中(第2章和第3章),我们调查了所有细胞是否基于共培养物中的空间位置在表型上有差异。利用骨髓基质细胞(BMSC)和人成骨细胞(HOB)作为BMM的代表性元素,与ALL细胞一起培养,我们发现ALL细胞相对于BMSC或HOB形成三个不同的种群。所有在基质层下迁移的肿瘤细胞(称为相暗(PD))均具有静态和化疗耐药性表型。细胞标记实验表明,共培养模型是动态的,并且相对于粘附的BMM细胞,所有细胞都容易在群体之间转换。此外,使用非骨髓来源的粘附层进行的共培养研究发现,尽管这些共培养支持PD群体的形成,但它们并不能保护所有细胞免于化学疗法的暴露。这些结果表明,在PD群体中看到的增加的化学抗性是ALL细胞与BMSC或HOB之间的串扰所特有的。还发现PD ALL细胞的代谢特性发生了变化,这可能有助于增加它们对化学疗法的抵抗力。此外,我们提供了书面和视频协议,用于隔离基质粘附层中的三个ALL种群。标准共培养模型的这种扩展将为研究人员提供一种在生物学上更相关的方法,以在BMM衍生的支持下研究耐药性ALL疾病。;在最后的研究(第4章)中,数据表明白血病细胞中BCL6的微环境调节是ALL的增殖和静止状态之间转变的一个因素。利用Bcr-Abl阴性(Ph-),阳性(Ph +)ALL细胞系和原发性患者样品的观察结果表明,肿瘤细胞BCL6蛋白表达由于BMSC和HOB衍生信号而降低。 BCL6减少的白血病细胞的特征在于增殖,G0积累和化疗耐药性降低。相反,从骨髓来源的基质中去除ALL细胞会导致白血病细胞中BCL6表达增加,从而对化疗具有增生作用和敏感性。在所有细胞中,shRNA对BCL6的化学抑制或敲除会导致增殖减弱,使人联想到骨髓微环境支持的静态肿瘤细胞,这些细胞具有化疗抗性并有助于疾病的复发。我们已经开发了一种独特的体外恢复模型,以在这种独特的领域中测试对肿瘤的化疗保护。将BMSC / HOB共培养的肿瘤细胞暴露于化学疗法中,然后使其从受过侮辱的药物中恢复,以确定对肿瘤存活和重新形成重要的因素。白血病BCL6的下调会导致静止的表型,而从微环境约束中释放出来的存活白血病细胞却增加了BCL6的表达,并经历了一段时间的侵袭性增殖。由于许多化疗方案需要肿瘤细胞增殖才能发挥最佳功效,因此我们在保护性微环境领域研究了白血病细胞中强迫BCL6表达的后果。数据表明,当与BMSC或HOB共培养时,强迫白血病细胞表达BCL6会使肿瘤对化疗诱导的细胞死亡敏感。此外,用增加BCL6表达的药物(例如蛋白酶体抑制剂MG132或ATM途径抑制剂咖啡因)进行预处理可使微环境保护的ALL细胞对化疗敏感。这些数据表明BCL6是一个因素由微环境衍生的信号调节,可能有助于调节ALL细胞周期进程和随后的治疗反应。此处提出的研究的总体目标是提供一个平台,用于研究由于使用BMM而受到BMM支持而产生的耐药性ALL。我们的体外共培养模型。此外,通过使用该模型,我们能够证明机制的变化,这可能导致化疗耐药,例如BMM相互作用后ALL中BCL6的下调。这些研究提供了机械方面的见解,将有助于设计新颖的治疗策略,从而破坏保护性微环境信号传导,其目标是提高ALL患者的化疗疗效和降低强度。以降低复发频率为主要目标,关键的次要优势是减少细胞毒性疗法的长期影响以及潜在地减少治疗引起的继发性恶性肿瘤。

著录项

  • 作者

    Slone, William Lee.;

  • 作者单位

    West Virginia University.;

  • 授予单位 West Virginia University.;
  • 学科 Medicine.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 157 p.
  • 总页数 157
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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