| Literature DB >> 28921505 |
Christine Wolf1, Angela Garding2, Katharina Filarsky1, Jasmin Bahlo3, Sandra Robrecht3, Natalia Becker4, Manuela Zucknick5, Arefeh Rouhi6, Anja Weigel6, Rainer Claus7, Dieter Weichenhan8, Barbara Eichhorst3, Kirsten Fischer3, Michael Hallek3, Florian Kuchenbauer6, Christoph Plass8, Hartmut Döhner6, Stephan Stilgenbauer6, Peter Lichter9, Daniel Mertens1,6.
Abstract
B cell receptor (BCR) signaling is a key for survival of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells, and BCR signaling inhibitors are clinically active. However, relapse and resistance to treatment require novel treatment options. To detect novel candidate therapeutic targets, we performed a genome-wide DNA methylation screen with custom arrays and identified aberrant promoter DNA methylation in 2,192 genes. The transcription factor NFATC1 that is a downstream effector of BCR signaling was among the top hypomethylated genes and was concomitantly transcriptionally upregulated in CLL. Intriguingly, NFATC1 promoter DNA hypomethylation levels were significantly variant in clinical trial cohorts from different disease progression stages and furthermore correlated with Binet disease staging and thymidine kinase levels, strongly suggesting a central role of NFATC1 in CLL development. Functionally, DNA hypomethylation at NFATC1 promoter inversely correlated with RNA levels of NFATC1 and dysregulation correlated with expression of target genes BCL-2, CCND1 and CCR7. The inhibition of the NFAT regulator calcineurin with tacrolimus and cyclosporin A and the BCR signaling inhibitor ibrutinib significantly reduced NFAT activity in leukemic cell lines, and NFAT inhibition resulted in increased apoptosis of primary CLL cells. In summary, our results indicate that the aberrant activation of NFATC1 by DNA hypomethylation and BCR signaling plays a major role in the pathomechanism of CLL.Entities:
Keywords: BCR signaling; NFATC1; chronic lymphocytic leukemia; ibrutinib; methylation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28921505 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.31057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396