| Literature DB >> 25247321 |
M F Arteaga1, J-H Mikesch1, T-K Fung1, C W E So1.
Abstract
Transcriptional deregulation plays a key role in a large array of cancers, and successful targeting of oncogenic transcription factors that sustain diseases has been a holy grail in the field. Acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL) driven by chimeric transcription factors encoding retinoic acid receptor alpha fusions is the paradigm of targeted cancer therapy, in which the application of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) treatments have markedly transformed this highly fatal cancer to a highly manageable disease. The extremely high complete remission rate resulted from targeted therapies using ATRA in combination with arsenic trioxide will likely be able to minimise or even totally eliminate the use of highly toxic chemotherapeutic agents in APL. In this article, we will review the molecular basis and the upcoming challenges of these targeted therapies in APL, and discuss the recent advance in our understanding of epigenetics underlying ATRA response and their potential use to further improve treatment response and overcome resistance.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25247321 PMCID: PMC4453638 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2014.374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Epigenetic functions of PML–RARalpha in APL pathogenesis and treatment response. (A) In APL cells, homotetrameric PML–RARalpha (for simplicity, the homotetramer is not illustrated in the figure) recruits multiple repressive epigenetic modifiers including DNMTs (green), PRC complexes (yellow), lysine methyltransferases (blue), and the histone lysine deactylase complex (pink). In the absence of ATRA, PHF8 is hypo-phosphorylated and associates with transcription factors (TFs) to binds to different chromatin regions (naive promoters). (B) Upon ATRA treatment, ATRA (red triangle) binds to RARalpha moiety and induces conformational changes that allow dissociation of the co-repressor complex. On the other hand, PHF8 can be phosphorylated by CDK1. It dissociates from its naive chromatin-binding sites and is recruited by RARalpha fusions (illustrated by a big dashed red arrow). PHF8 removes the repressive H3K9me2 mark, but promotes active histone marks (H3K4 hypermethylation and K9 hyperacetylation) and recruitment of RNA polymerase II to turn on gene expression. Genes/proteins to be activated are bolded. Normal arrow indicates activation; blunted arrow indicates suppression; dashed arrow represents translocation of PHF8 protein; thickened arrows represent enhanced processes. ‘me' is hypermethylation; ‘Ac' is hyperacetylation; ‘p' is phosphorylation and ‘?' indicates the mechanism remains unclear.
Figure 2Targeting ATRA-resistant APL. In most of the cases, ATRA treatment induces degradation of RARalpha fusion and APL cell differentiation, resulting in complete remission. However, some APL patients are refractory to ATRA, or in some cases ATRA treatment may select/evolve drug-resistant clones that are no longer responsive to ATRA. Several approaches have been proposed to target ATRA-resistant APL. These include (1) retinoid derivatives with a higher affinity to the fusions; (2) ATO that binds to the PML moiety of the fusion and subsequently induces degradation of the onco-fusion; (3) HDACi that facilitate histone acetylation; and (4) overexpression or hyperphosphorylation of PHF8 that removes the repressive H3K9me2 mark to turn on the differentiation transcriptional programme.