4.7 Article

Inhibition of Rac GTPase signaling and downstream prosurvival Bcl-2 proteins as combination targeted therapy in MLL-AF9 leukemia

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 118, Issue 19, Pages 5235-5245

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2011-04-351817

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/NICHD [K12-HD000850]
  2. National Institutes of Health [K08-CA12291, DK62757, CA140518]
  3. United States Public Health Service [MO1 RR 08 084]
  4. National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health, a Center of Excellence in Molecular Hematology [DK090971]
  5. Gabrielle's Angel Foundation for Cancer Research

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The Rac family of small Rho GTPases coordinates diverse cellular functions in hematopoietic cells including adhesion, migration, cytoskeleton rearrangements, gene transcription, proliferation, and survival. The integrity of Rac signaling has also been found to critically regulate cellular functions in the initiation and maintenance of hematopoietic malignancies. Using an in vivo gene targeting approach, we demonstrate that Rac2, but not Rac1, is critical to the initiation of acute myeloid leukemia in a retroviral expression model of MLL-AF9 leukemogenesis. However, loss of either Rac1 or Rac2 is sufficient to impair survival and growth of the transformed MLL-AF9 leukemia. Rac2 is known to positively regulate expression of Bcl-2 family proteins toward a prosurvival balance. We demonstrate that disruption of downstream survival signaling through antiapoptotic Bcl-2 proteins is implicated in mediating the effects of Rac2 deficiency in MLL-AF9 leukemia. Indeed, over-expression of Bcl-xL is able to rescue the effects of Rac2 deficiency and MLL-AF9 cells are exquisitely sensitive to direct inhibition of Bcl-2 family proteins by the BH3-mimetic, ABT-737. Furthermore, concurrent exposure to NSC23766, a small-molecule inhibitor of Rac activation, increases the apoptotic effect of ABT-737, indicating the Rac/Bcl-2 survival pathway may be targeted synergistically. (Blood. 2011;118(19):5235-5245)

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