| Literature DB >> 27642303 |
Pallavi Sontakke1, Jenny Jaques1, Edo Vellenga1, Jan Jacob Schuringa1.
Abstract
Over the past years, a wide variety of in vivo mouse models have been generated in order to unravel the molecular pathology of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) and to develop and improve therapeutic approaches. These models range from (conditional) transgenic models, knock-in models, and murine bone marrow retroviral transduction models followed by transplantation. With the advancement of immunodeficient xenograft models, it has become possible to use human stem/progenitor cells for in vivo studies as well as cells directly derived from CML patients. These models not only mimic CML but also have been instrumental in uncovering various fundamental mechanisms of CML disease progression and tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) resistance. With the availability of iPSC technology, it has become feasible to derive, maintain, and expand CML subclones that are at least genetically identical to those in patients. The following review provides an overview of all murine as well as human xenograft models for CML established till date.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27642303 PMCID: PMC5014953 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1625015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1CML human and murine models till date. This figure summarizes established models for CML using chimeric mouse strains as well as different immunocompromised strains. Different experimental approaches and strategies along the time are also highlighted. “∗” refers to generation of serially transplantable leukemia and reference numbers (as indicated in Table 1) are denoted for each mouse model.
| Mouse models | Method | Phenotype of leukemia | Features | References |
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| Conventional transgenic | Synthetic BCR-v-ABL driven by E | Pre-B and T lymphomas (3/12 with E | BCR-v-ABL possesses oncogenic capability | [ |
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| Conventional transgenic | p190 BCR-ABL gene driven by delta metallothionein-1 promoter | Myeloid leukemia (2/8 mice) and lymphoid leukemia (6/8 mice) between 10 and 58 days of birth | Follow-up studies with bigger cohort developed transplantable ALL/lymphoma | [ |
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| Conventional transgenic | p210 BCR-ABL gene driven by delta metallothionein-1 promoter | T cell leukemia | The tumorigenicity of p210 BCR-ABL chimeric gene products is specific for the hematopoietic cells | [ |
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| Conventional transgenic | p210 BCR-ABL gene driven by the mouse tec promoter | ALL (2/5 founder mice developed), MPDs in transgenic progeny with 4–8 months of latency | Transgenic progeny of one founder mice exhibited MPD with fundamental features of CML. Secondary mice showed excessive proliferation of myeloid and megakaryocytic cells; however, they succumbed to progressing anemia | [ |
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| Conditional transgenic | Tet-off system: tTA driven by the MMTV-LTR promoter | Lethal B-ALL developed in 100% of mice within 3–11 weeks on withdrawal of tetracycline due to p210 BCR-ABL1 expression | MMTV-LTR promoter directed expression of tTA to B220+ BM cells. Abolition of BCR-ABL1 expression led to apoptosis of leukemic cells and hence reversal of B-ALL phenotype. Reverted mice from one founder did succumb to ALL without BCR-ABL expression, possibly due to the acquisition of additional mutations | [ |
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| Conditional transgenic | Tet-off system: tTA driven by the SCL promoter | Neutrophilia, leukocytosis, and dissemination of myeloid cells into spleen, liver, and lymph nodes within 29–122 days upon tetracycline withdrawal due to p210 BCR-ABL1 expression. | SCLtTA/BCR-ABL expression model recapitulates many features of human CP-CML | [ |
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| Conditional transgenic | Overexpression of BMI1 by ubiquitin C promoter in a lentiral EGFP vector in BCR-ABL expressing CP-CML stem cells and progenitor using Scl/p210 BCR-ABL binary mouse model | Development of serially transplantable B-ALL with accumulation of BMI1/BCR-ABL+ B-cells after 16 weeks of transplantation | BMI1 synergizes with BCR-ABL to transform chronic-phase SCL/p210 B-lymphoid progenitors but not HSCs or multipotent progenitors (MPPs) and imparts a proliferative advantage to induce serially transplantable B-ALL | [ |
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| Transgenic by homologous recombination | E14 ES cells to create in-frame fusion of p190 BCR-ABL with exon 1 of murine |
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| Transduction/transplantation | Mu BM transduced with retroviral construct of p210 BCR-ABL expressed under control of MPSV myeloid cell-specific promoter | 13/30 developed 3 distinct malignancies: CML, ALL, and macrophage-like tumor | Retrovirus mediated expression of p210 BCR-ABL demonstrates murine model system for CML | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | Mu BM of 5-fluorouracil | >90% mice that received v-abl or BCR-ABL transduced cells died due to myelomonocytic leukemia, granulocytic leukemia, and pre-B-cell lymphoma | Both BCR-ABL and activated v-abl can induce similar malignancies. Integration site analyses allowed evaluation of clonality | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | Mu BM transduced with retroviral construct of p210 BCR-ABL under control of MSCV LTR promoter in the presence of SCF | All recipients came down with disease and displayed markedly elevated WBC counts with granulocyte predominance | Induction of murine CML in 100% of recipients with 4–6 weeks of latency. | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | 5-FU treated Mu BM cells transduced with retroviral construct of p210 BCR-ABL expressed under control of MSCV promoter | Elevated WBC counts, majority of which were granulocytes but also included myeloblasts and basophils | Induction of transplantable myeloproliferative disease resembling CML. | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | 5-FU treated/untreated Mu BM cells transduced with retroviral construct of p210 BCR-ABL, p190 BCR-ABL, and p230 BCR-ABL expressed under control of MSCV promoter | CML-like syndrome when 5-FU treated donor cells were used. | All 3 forms of BCR-ABL induce identical CML-like syndrome in mice but p190 BCR-ABL had increased potency for induction of B-ALL | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | 5-FU treated bone marrow cells with a retrovirus encoding | 50% of mice died of B-ALL, 42% with MPN, and 8% of mixed (myeloid and lymphoid) leukemia when transplanted with miR-125b plus BCR-ABL-infected cells with median survival of 21 days as compared to 35 days in BCR-ABL transduced control group | miR-125b accelerates the oncogenicity of BCR-ABL in transplanted mouse model | [ |
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| Transduction/transplantation | B-ALL LDBM cells from specific gene-deleted murine models or WT mice and UCB CD34+ were transduced with bicistronic | >90% of recipient mice developed B-ALL in approximately 37 days characterized by B220dim+, CD19+, and CD43+/dim B-cell progenitor population. Infiltration in other organs was also evident | Vav3 plays a crucial role in p190-BCR-ABL-mediated leukemogenesis, proliferation, and survival especially for the B-cell progenitor | [ |
| Human models | Method | Phenotype of leukemia | Features | References |
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| Xenograft | Nude mice injected with K562 | K562 grew as solid vascularized tumors | Tumor cells were triphoid and retined human chromosome markers | [ |
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| Xenograft | SIA-nu/nu mice were injected with leukemic cell lines and primary patient sample | K562 formed solid tumor at challenged site without metastatic spread with mean latency of 10 days | 6/8 leukemic cell lines and 5/18 primary neoplastic tumors induced serially transplantable solid soft mass | [ |
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| Xenograft | BM samples of CP-CML and BC-CML as well as cell lines; K562 and EM-2 were transplanted into CB-17 | All mice injected with K562 as well as EM-2 or primary CP-CML and BC-CML samples by IV or IP engraft to give myeloblasts in BM, blood, and tumors in peritoneum | After initial growth in kidney capsule, myeloblasts were detected at varying levels in PB and BM. | [ |
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| Xenograft | BM or PB samples obtained from CP-CML and BC-CML patients were injected by IV into sublethally irradiated [400 cGy] SCID mice. Exogenous cytokines PIXY321 or c-kit ligand was injected IP | CP-CML and BC-CML patient sample showed 1–>10% engraftment with 30–60 days of latency in presence or absence of exogenous human cytokines | Multilineage engraftment and CD34+ cells were maintained for more than 60 days after transplantation. | [ |
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| Xenograft | MNCs from apheresis material from CML patient were IV transplanted into sublethally irradiated [300 cGy] NOD/SCID mice. Preselected CD34+ and CD34− cells were also used for BM engrafted studies | ≥1–84% multilineage engraftment observed in BM in 76% mice and only 66% of mice showed 16% predominantly T cell splenic engraftment. CML-like disease in BM and spleen. 39% ± 5% leukemic engraftment in 25 mice having ≥9% BM engraftment was higher as compared to BCR-ABL engraftment in spleen | Higher engraftment in NOD/SCID mice using low cell dose compared to SCID mice | [ |
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| Xenograft | MNCs or CD34+ enriched cells from BM or PB of 11 CP-CML patient were IV transplanted into sublethally irradiated [400 cGy] NOD/SCID mice | 25% of NOD/SCID recipients had 40–80% human cells, whereas only 3% SCID mice contained similar levels. Further, engrafted human cells had high proportion of leukemic cells along with CD34+ cells | NOD/SCID mice allow greater engraftment and amplification of both normal and leukemic cells as compared to SCID mouse model | [ |
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| Xenograft | BV173 and PB MN cells from CP, AP, and BC CML patient samples were injected | Kinetics and extent of engraftment BP > AP > CP, although according to growth rate BP > AP ≥ CP | Kinetics of BM repopulation are different for CP, AP, and BC phase of CML | [ |
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| Xenograft | 9 CP-CML patient samples with predominant LTC-IC were transplanted into sublethally irradiated [350 cGy] NOD/SCID and NOD/SCID | Consistent and durable engraftment was observed with reduced output of B cells and enhanced myelopoiesis with excessive production of erythroid, megakaryocytes, and BCR-ABL CD34+ expressing IL-3 and G-CSF transcripts | No progressive disease phenotype was observed marking CP-CML phase of the disease | [ |
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| Xenograft | CB CD34+ cells were transduced with MSCV based retroviral constructs for BCR-ABL and transplanted 0.2 to 0.3 million cells into each sublethally irradiated [350 cGy] NOD/SCID and NOD/SCID | BCR-ABL transduced cells produced increased ratio of myeloid to B-lymphoid cells with increase in erythroid and megakaryocytic cells. 4/28 mice developed an increased WBC count and/or splenomegaly after 5-6 months of latency | First ever model to describe the | [ |
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| Xenograft | CB CD34+ cells were transduced with MSCV based retroviral constructs for BMI1 and BCR-ABL and transplanted only 0.46 to 0.38 million cells into each sublethally irradiated [3 Gy] NOD/SCID mice | 4/8 mice succumbed to [CD34+ CD19+] B-ALL in 16–22 weeks on transplantation of CD34+ cells cotransduced with BMI/BCR-ABL and all secondaries came down with similar phenotypes within 8–12 weeks | Coexpression of BMI1 and BCR-ABL in CB CD34+ cells is sufficient to induce transplantable B-ALL in NOD/SCID mice | [ |
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| iPSC | KBM7 cells were reprogrammed by retroviral transduction of | Teratoma formation and imatinib resistance were observed | The process of reprogramming KBM7 cell lines readily abolished BCR-ABL dependency which was restored by differentiation into hematopoietic lineage | [ |
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| iPSC | MNCs from BM of CP-CML patient sample were cultured with human SCF, IL-3, IL-6, and Flt3L for 2 days and transfected with episomal vectors by nucleofection | CP-CML iPSC lines generated exhibited features of pluripotent stem cells, exhibited complex karyotype, and differentiated into hematopoietic lineages | Transgene free CML iPSC lines can be obtained | [ |
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| iPSC | Regeneration of CML iPSCs from CD34+ BM MNCs of CP-CML patient sample by retroviral vectors | DNA methylation pattern and gene expression profile of CML-iPSCs were different from those of original CML sample but were similar to normal iPSCs and human ES cells | Recapitulation of CP CML was shown in terms of that fraction of phenotypically immature cells which showed imatinib resistance although more differentiated cells recovered the sensitivity to imatinib | [ |