Literature DB >> 9865735

Constitutive expression of cellular retinoic acid binding protein II and lack of correlation with sensitivity to all-trans retinoic acid in acute promyelocytic leukemia cells.

D C Zhou1, S J Hallam, S J Lee, R S Klein, P H Wiernik, M S Tallman, R E Gallagher.   

Abstract

The up-regulation of cellular retinoic acid binding protein-II (CRABP-II) has been invoked as an important mechanism of clinically acquired resistance to all-trans retinoic acid (RA) therapy in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). To test this hypothesis, we used quantitative reverse transcription-PCR and fast performance liquid chromatography procedures to examine the levels of CRABP-II mRNA and RA binding activity in APL patient samples. We found that CRABP-II mRNA in APL cells from pretreatment patients (n = 36) was constitutively expressed at relatively high levels (median, 0.92; range, 0.16-4.13) relative to the level in CRABP-H protein-expressing NB4 cells (arbitrarily set at 1.0 unit). Consistent with this finding, the RA binding activity of CRABP in APL cells from three pretreatment cases (range, 27.2-53.2 fmol/mg protein) was similar to that of NB4 cells (22.6 +/- 5.4 fmol/mg protein). Furthermore, in the pretreatment samples, there was no association between CRABP-H mRNA expression level and APL cellular sensitivity to RA-induced differentiation in vitro. After 45 days of remission induction therapy on Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group protocol E2491, CRABP-II mRNA was modestly increased from day 0 values in patients treated with either RA (median increase, 0.41) or chemotherapy (median increase, 0.56), and there was no significant difference between the two treatment groups (P = 0.91). In patients studied after relapse from RA therapy (n = 7), there was a significant decline in APL cell sensitivity to RA-induced differentiation in vitro compared with patients after relapse from chemotherapy (n = 5; P = 0.015-0.055 at three RA concentrations tested), but in the RA relapse cases, there was no change from pretreatment levels of CRABP-II mRNA (median, 0.98) or, in three relapse cases studied, of RA protein binding activity (range, 22.1-70.7 fmol/mg protein). Taken together, our data strongly imply that variations in CRABP-II expression and RA binding activity are not causally related to the development of clinically acquired APL cellular RA resistance, but rather, they suggest that constitutive expression of CRABP-II could have a facilitative role in the response of APL cells to RA.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9865735

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  6 in total

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Journal:  J Mol Diagn       Date:  2001-11       Impact factor: 5.568

2.  G0S2 is an all-trans-retinoic acid target gene.

Authors:  Sutisak Kitareewan; Steven Blumen; David Sekula; Reid P Bissonnette; William W Lamph; Qingping Cui; Robert Gallagher; Ethan Dmitrovsky
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 5.650

3.  CRABP-II is a highly sensitive and specific diagnostic molecular marker for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma in distinguishing from benign pancreatic conditions.

Authors:  Wenbin Xiao; Hong Hong; Amad Awadallah; Shuiliang Yu; Lan Zhou; Wei Xin
Journal:  Hum Pathol       Date:  2014-01-31       Impact factor: 3.466

4.  Restoration of CCAAT enhancer binding protein α P42 induces myeloid differentiation and overcomes all-trans retinoic acid resistance in human acute promyelocytic leukemia NB4-R1 cells.

Authors:  Limengmeng Wang; Haowen Xiao; Xing Zhang; Weichao Liao; Shan Fu; He Huang
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2015-09-14       Impact factor: 5.650

Review 5.  Why Differentiation Therapy Sometimes Fails: Molecular Mechanisms of Resistance to Retinoids.

Authors:  Petr Chlapek; Viera Slavikova; Pavel Mazanek; Jaroslav Sterba; Renata Veselska
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2018-01-03       Impact factor: 5.923

6.  CRABP-II enhances pancreatic cancer cell migration and invasion by stabilizing interleukin 8 expression.

Authors:  Shuiliang Yu; Neetha Parameswaran; Ming Li; Yiwei Wang; Mark W Jackson; Huiping Liu; Wei Xin; Lan Zhou
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-12-26
  6 in total

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