| Literature DB >> 19265549 |
Anne Margrete Øyan1, Nina Anensen, Trond Hellem Bø, Laila Stordrange, Inge Jonassen, Øystein Bruserud, Karl-Henning Kalland, Bjørn Tore Gjertsen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The molecular changes in vivo in acute myeloid leukemia cells early after start of conventional genotoxic chemotherapy are incompletely understood, and it is not known if early molecular modulations reflect clinical response.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19265549 PMCID: PMC2673224 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-9-77
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1DNA microarray analysis in AML cells during . AML blast viability was investigated in four patients sampled during in vivo chemotherapy. The expression of apoptosis related proteins were detected by Western blotting (P3, P4) (A). Expression of the pro-apoptotic protein BAX increased during therapy, suggesting initiation of cell death. However, no cleavage of the executioner protease pro-caspase-3 could be detected and this is in agreement with the flowcytometric analysis in (B). Apoptosis was measured using flowcytometric detection of Annexin-V FITC and propidium iodide staining (P1, P3) as described in Methods. No signs of apoptosis could be detected in the cells during the first six hours of therapy in either patient (B). Similar viability (~80%) was present at 18 h determined by analysis of nuclear morphology and cell scattering (data not shown). Early changes in gene expression of p53-associated genes were detected already 2–4 hours following induction therapy (C). The profiles of 27 of the 31 p53 associated genes are shown. Late response gene expression of p53-inducible genes was detected 18–24 hours after treatment induction (D). For abbreviations see Additional File 2. The dendrogram and heat maps show a Eucledian two-way cluster analysis based on the most consistently upregulated genes. Thus, genes that cluster together have a similar expression profile as a response to induction therapy. In the diagram the relative mRNA levels in the blasts before therapy are colored in green, and upregulated genes following standard chemotherapy treatment are shown in violet according to the color scale below.
Figure 2Expression of apoptosis modulators BCL-2, BAX and BBC3 during chemotherapy. The ratio of BCL2/BAX or BCL2/BBC3 mRNA was determined after Agilent Human Whole Genome Oligo Microarray analysis (A). Ratios were observed to decrease in the first hours post induction treatment, indicating an increase in pro-apoptotic gene expression. Ratios varied greatly between patients and low baseline ratios were associated with better response to treatment (Additional File 1). Ratios were normalized and mean presented with standard deviation (error bars) (B), indicating early pro-apoptotic alteration in BCL2/BAX mRNA. Two patients (P3 and P8) were treated with anthracycline ex vivo and protein expression analyzed using Western blots (C). The ex vivo response to anthracycline included increased stabilization of p53 followed by regulation of p53 target gene expression in concordance with in vivo observations.
Figure 3Gene ontology analysis of chemotherapy induced genes. Gene ontology (GO) annotations associated with overexpressed genes that significantly discriminate between Early (2–4 h) and Late (18–24 h) responses were determined using the Source database http://source.stanford.edu and iterative group analysis (iGA) [22]. All overexpressed genes in the array were analyzed to determine gene products associated with any GO-term. The significant annotations consisting of genes found to be significantly up- or downregulated for early and late response were selected by use of 100 permutations. The threshold for significant GO annotations was set to p-value 4.5E-4. Number of genes (%), horizontal axis, represents the proportion of the identified genes belonging to each GO term that significantly changed their expression at early or late timepoints after start of chemotherapy.