Tight regulation of FOXO1 is essential for maintenance of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia

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Fan Wang, Salih Demir, Franziska Gehringer, Clarissa D Osswald, Felix Seyfried, Stefanie Enzenmüller, Sarah M Eckhoff, Thomas Maier, Karlheinz Holzmann, Klaus-Michael Debatin, Thomas Wirth, Lüder H Meyer, Alexey Ushmorov

  • Blood
  • 25.476
  • 2018 Jun 28;131(26):2929-2942.
  • Human
  • 流式
  • 循环系统
  • B细胞
  • 白血病
  • HLA-A2

Abstract

The FOXO1 transcription factor plays an essential role in the regulation of proliferation and survival programs at early stages of B-cell differentiation. Here, we show that tightly regulated FOXO1 activity is essential for maintenance of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL). Genetic and pharmacological inactivation of FOXO1 in BCP-ALL cell lines produced a strong antileukemic effect associated with CCND3 downregulation. Moreover, we demonstrated that CCND3 expression is critical for BCP-ALL survival and that overexpression of CCND3 protected BCP-ALL cell lines from growth arrest and apoptosis induced by FOXO1 inactivation. Most importantly, pharmacological inhibition of FOXO1 showed antileukemia activity on several primary, patient-derived, pediatric ALL xenografts with effective leukemia reduction in the hematopoietic, lymphoid, and central nervous system organ compartments, ultimately leading to prolonged survival without leukemia reoccurrence in a preclinical in vivo model of BCP-ALL. These results suggest that repression of FOXO1 might be a feasible approach for the treatment of BCP-ALL.
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