| Literature DB >> 30074149 |
Hao Guo1, Sheng-Yan Lin2, Wen-Xiang Ren1, Qian Lei1,2, Zhi-Chao Chen1, Lu Zhang3, Qiu-Bai Li4.
Abstract
Low-dose cytarabine combined with differentiating or DNA hypomethylating agents, such as vitamin D compounds, is a potential regimen to treat acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients who are unfit for high-intensity chemotherapy. The present study aimed to determine which subset of AML would be most responsive to low-dose cytarabine with the differentiating agent 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25-D3). Here, firstly, cBioPortal database was used and we found out that vitamin D receptor (VDR) was highly expressed in acute monocytic leukemia (M5) and high VDR expression was associated with a poor survival of AML patients. Then, we confirmed that 1,25-D3 at clinical available concentration could induce more significant differentiation in acute monocytic leukemia cell lines (U937, MOLM-13, THP-1) and blasts from M5 patients than in non-monocytic cell lines (KGla and K562) and blasts from M2 patient. Finally, it was shown that the combination of 1,25-D3 and low-dose cytarabine further increased the differentiating rate, growth inhibition and G0/G1 arrest, while mild changes were found in the apoptosis in acute monocytic leukemia cell lines. Our study demonstrates that the enhanced response of acute monocytic leukemia cells to low-dose cytarabine by 1,25-D3 might indicate a novel therapeutic direction for patients with acute monocytic leukemia, especially for elderly and frail ones.Entities:
Keywords: 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3; acute monocytic leukemia; low-dose cytarabine; vitamin D receptor
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30074149 DOI: 10.1007/s11596-018-1838-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Med Sci ISSN: 2523-899X