| Literature DB >> 24085765 |
Kelsie M Bernot1, John S Nemer, Ramasamy Santhanam, Shujun Liu, Nicholas A Zorko, Susan P Whitman, Kathryn E Dickerson, Mengzi Zhang, Xiaojuan Yang, Kathleen K McConnell, Elshafa H Ahmed, Maura R Muñoz, Ronald F Siebenaler, Gabriel G Marcucci, Bethany L Mundy-Bosse, Daniel L Brook, Sabrina Garman, Adrienne M Dorrance, Xiaoli Zhang, Jianying Zhang, Robert J Lee, William Blum, Michael A Caligiuri, Guido Marcucci.
Abstract
The coexpression of the MLL partial tandem duplication (PTD) and the FLT3 internal tandem duplication (ITD) mutations associate with a poor outcome in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In mice, a double knock-in (dKI) of Mll(PTD/wt) and Flt3(ITD/wt) mutations induces spontaneous AML with an increase in DNA methyltransferases (Dnmt1, 3a, and 3b) and global DNA methylation index, thereby recapitulating its human AML counterpart. We determined that a regulator of Dnmts, miR-29b, is downregulated in bone marrow of dKI AML mice. Bortezomib exerted a dose-dependent increase in miR-29b expression in AML blasts ex vivo, followed by decreased Dnmts, reduced proliferation, and increased apoptosis. In vivo, bortezomib was not active against dKI AML, yet liposomal-encapsulated bortezomib, as a single agent, reversed downregulation of miR-29b in vivo and induced a long-term (90-day) disease-free remission in 80% of dKI AML mice that exhibited high leukemic burden at the start of therapy, yet showed no signs of relapse at autopsy. Taken together, these data support that liposomal bortezomib, as a single agent, eradicates Mll(PTD/wt):Flt3(ITD/wt) AML in mouse and may represent a powerful and potentially curative approach to high-risk human disease.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24085765 PMCID: PMC3843236 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-06-507426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113