| Literature DB >> 17692804 |
Christina M Annunziata1, R Eric Davis, Yulia Demchenko, William Bellamy, Ana Gabrea, Fenghuang Zhan, Georg Lenz, Ichiro Hanamura, George Wright, Wenming Xiao, Sandeep Dave, Elaine M Hurt, Bruce Tan, Hong Zhao, Owen Stephens, Madhumita Santra, David R Williams, Lenny Dang, Bart Barlogie, John D Shaughnessy, W Michael Kuehl, Louis M Staudt.
Abstract
Mechanisms of constitutive NF-kappaB signaling in multiple myeloma are unknown. An inhibitor of IkappaB kinase beta (IKKbeta) targeting the classical NF-kappaB pathway was lethal to many myeloma cell lines. Several cell lines had elevated expression of NIK due to genomic alterations or protein stabilization, while others had inactivating mutations of TRAF3; both kinds of abnormality triggered the classical and alternative NF-kappaB pathways. A majority of primary myeloma patient samples and cell lines had elevated NF-kappaB target gene expression, often associated with genetic or epigenetic alteration of NIK, TRAF3, CYLD, BIRC2/BIRC3, CD40, NFKB1, or NFKB2. These data demonstrate that addiction to the NF-kappaB pathway is frequent in myeloma and suggest that IKKbeta inhibitors hold promise for the treatment of this disease.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17692804 PMCID: PMC2730509 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2007.07.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743