Literature DB >> 15693136

Differentiation of acute and chronic myeloid leukemic blasts into the dendritic cell lineage: analysis of various differentiation-inducing signals.

Mohamed Kharfan-Dabaja1, Ernesto Ayala, Inna Lindner, Pedro J Cejas, Nizar J Bahlis, Despina Kolonias, Louise M Carlson, Kelvin P Lee.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Ex vivo differentiation of myeloid leukemic blasts into dendritic cells (DCs) holds significant promise for use as cellular vaccines, as they may present a constellation of endogenously expressed known and unknown leukemia antigens to the immune system. Although variety of stimuli can drive leukemia --> DC differentiation in vitro, these blast-derived DCs typically have aberrant characteristics compared with DCs generated from normal progenitors by the same stimuli. It is not clear whether this is due to underlying leukemogenic mechanisms (e.g., specific oncogenes), genetic defects, stage of maturation arrest, defects in cytokine receptor expression or signal transduction pathways, or whether different stimuli themselves induce qualitatively dissimilar DC differentiation.
METHODS: To assess what factors may contribute to aberrant leukemic blast --> DC differentiation, we have examined how the same leukemic blasts (AML and CML) respond to different DC differentiation signals--including extracellular (the cytokine combination GM-CSF + TNF-alpha + IL-4) and intracellular (the protein kinase C agonist PMA, the calcium ionophore A23187, and the combination of PMA plus A23187) stimuli.
RESULTS: We have found that the same leukemic blasts will develop qualitatively different sets of DC characteristics in response to differing stimuli, although no stimuli consistently induced all of the characteristic DC features. There were no clear differences in the responses relative to specific oncogene expression or stage of maturation arrest (AML vs CML). Signal transduction agonists that bypassed membrane receptors/proximal signaling (in particular, the combination of PMA and A23187) consistently induced the greatest capability to activate T cells. Interestingly, this ability did not clearly correlate with expression of MHC/costimulatory ligands.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that signal transduction may play an important role in the aberrant DC differentiation of leukemic blasts, and demonstrate that direct activation of PKC together with intracellular calcium signaling may be an effective method for generating immunostimulatory leukemia-derived DCs.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15693136     DOI: 10.1007/s00262-004-0562-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother        ISSN: 0340-7004            Impact factor:   6.968


  6 in total

1.  The tumor suppressor p15Ink4b regulates the differentiation and maturation of conventional dendritic cells.

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2.  miR-638 regulates differentiation and proliferation in leukemic cells by targeting cyclin-dependent kinase 2.

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3.  Optimization and limitation of calcium ionophore to generate DCs from acute myeloid leukemic cells.

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Journal:  Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2007-12-31       Impact factor: 4.679

Review 4.  Role of calcium-dependent protein kinases in chronic myeloid leukemia: combined effects of PKC and BCR-ABL signaling on cellular alterations during leukemia development.

Authors:  André L Mencalha; Stephany Corrêa; Eliana Abdelhay
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  Personalizing Chinese medicine by integrating molecular features of diseases and herb ingredient information: application to acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Lin Huang; Haichang Li; Duoli Xie; Tieliu Shi; Chengping Wen
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-06-27

6.  New insights into antigen specific immunotherapy for chronic myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Yangqiu Li; Chen Lin; Christian A Schmidt
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2012-12-15       Impact factor: 5.722

  6 in total

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