| Literature DB >> 29367285 |
Valentina Folgiero1, Cristina Sorino2, Matteo Pallocca2, Francesca De Nicola2, Frauke Goeman3, Valentina Bertaina4, Luisa Strocchio4, Paolo Romania4, Angela Pitisci4, Simona Iezzi2, Valeria Catena2, Tiziana Bruno2, Georgios Strimpakos5, Claudio Passananti6, Elisabetta Mattei5, Giovanni Blandino3, Franco Locatelli4,7, Maurizio Fanciulli8.
Abstract
Despite progress in treating B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL), disease recurrence remains the main cause of treatment failure. New strategies to improve therapeutic outcomes are needed, particularly in high-risk relapsed patients. Che-1/AATF (Che-1) is an RNA polymerase II-binding protein involved in proliferation and tumor survival, but its role in hematological malignancies has not been clarified. Here, we show that Che-1 is overexpressed in pediatric BCP-ALL during disease onset and at relapse, and that its depletion inhibits the proliferation of BCP-ALL cells. Furthermore, we report that c-Myc regulates Che-1 expression by direct binding to its promoter and describe a strict correlation between Che-1 expression and c-Myc expression. RNA-seq analyses upon Che-1 or c-Myc depletion reveal a strong overlap of the respective controlled pathways. Genomewide ChIP-seq experiments suggest that Che-1 acts as a downstream effector of c-Myc. These results identify the pivotal role of Che-1 in the control of BCP-ALL proliferation and present the protein as a possible therapeutic target in children with relapsed BCP-ALL.Entities:
Keywords: BCP‐ALL; Che‐1; c‐Myc; leukemogenesis; proliferation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29367285 PMCID: PMC5835840 DOI: 10.15252/embr.201744871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO Rep ISSN: 1469-221X Impact factor: 8.807