4.7 Article

Calreticulin exposure on malignant blasts predicts a cellular anticancer immune response in patients with acute myeloid leukemia

Journal

CELL DEATH & DISEASE
Volume 1, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/cddis.2010.82

Keywords

calreticulin exposure; acute myeloid leukemia; T cells immunity; anthracyclines

Categories

Funding

  1. la Fondation de France contre la Leucemie
  2. Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (INSERM)
  3. Institut Gustave Roussy
  4. l'Institut National du Cancer (INCa)
  5. Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer
  6. Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (ARC)
  7. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale en France (FRM)
  8. Swedish Cancer Society
  9. Children's Cancer Society
  10. Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences
  11. Ake Wiberg foundation

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Experiments performed in mice revealed that anthracyclines stimulate immunogenic cell death that is characterized by the pre-apoptotic exposure of calreticulin (CRT) on the surface of dying tumor cells. Here, we determined whether CRT exposure at the cell surface (ecto-CRT) occurs in human cancer in response to anthracyclines in vivo, focusing on acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which is currently treated with a combination of aracytine and anthracyclines. Most of the patients benefit from the induction chemotherapy but relapse within 1-12 months. In this study, we investigated ecto-CRT expression on malignant blasts before and after induction chemotherapy. We observed that leukemic cells from some patients exhibited ecto-CRT regardless of chemotherapy and that this parameter was not modulated by in vivo chemotherapy. Ecto-CRT correlated with the presence of phosphorylated eIF2 alpha within the blasts, in line with the possibility that CRT exposure results from an endoplasmic reticulum stress response. Importantly, high levels of ecto-CRT on malignant myeloblasts positively correlated with the ability of autologous T cells to secrete interferon-gamma on stimulation with blast-derived dendritic cell. We conclude that the presence of ecto-CRT on leukemia cells facilitates cellular anticancer immune responses in AML patients. Cell Death and Disease (2010) 1, e104; doi:10.1038/cddis.2010.82; published online 2 December 2010

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