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Re-activation of mitochondrial apoptosis inhibits T-cell lymphoma survival and treatment resistance

Authors :
Mathias Heikenwalder
Yi Jh
Petra Mayer
Philipp J. Jost
Andreas Strasser
Christian Peschel
Bendz H
Marco Herling
Nicole Müller
Ulrich Keller
Sylvia Hartmann
Ulrike Höckendorf
S. Spinner
Jürgen Ruland
Giuliano Crispatzu
Monica Yabal
Schader T
Enkhtsetseg Munkhbaatar
Konstanze Pechloff
Zhoulei Li
Sebastian Newrzela
M. L. Hansmann
Gemma L. Kelly
Source :
Leukemia. 30(7)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

T lymphocyte non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (T-NHL) represents an aggressive and largely therapy-resistant subtype of lymphoid malignancies. As deregulated apoptosis is a frequent hallmark of lymphomagenesis, we analyzed gene expression profiles and protein levels of primary human T-NHL samples for various apoptotic regulators. We identified the apoptotic regulator MCL-1 as the only pro-survival BCL-2 family member to be highly expressed throughout all human T-NHL subtypes. Functional validation of pro-survival protein members of the BCL-2 family in two independent T-NHL mouse models identified that the partial loss of Mcl-1 significantly delayed T-NHL development in vivo. Moreover, the inducible reduction of MCL-1 protein levels in lymphoma-burdened mice severely impaired the continued survival of T-NHL cells, increased their susceptibility to chemotherapeutics and delayed lymphoma progression. Lymphoma viability remained unaffected by the genetic deletion or pharmacological inhibition of all alternative BCL-2 family members. Consistent with a therapeutic window for MCL-1 treatment within the context of the whole organism, we observed an only minimal toxicity after systemic heterozygous loss of Mcl-1 in vivo. We conclude that re-activation of mitochondrial apoptosis by blockade of MCL-1 represents a promising therapeutic strategy to treat T-cell lymphoma.

Details

ISSN :
14765551
Volume :
30
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Leukemia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bef2d27f83bbcdc04f4f73c7430e4d5