Determination of genes and microRNAs involved in the resistance to fludarabine in vivo in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
By: Etienne Moussay , Valerie Palissot , Laurent Vallar , Helene A Poirel , Thomas Wenner , Victoria El-Khoury , Nassera Aouali , Kris van Moer , Bernadette Leners , Francois Bernardin , Arnaud Muller , Pascale Cornillet-Lefebvre , Alain Delmer , Caroline Duhem , Fernand Ries , Eric van Dyck and Guy Berchem

Molecular Cancer 2010, 9:115 doi:10.1186/1476-4598-9-115
Published: 20 May 2010

Abstract (Provisional)

Background

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells are often affected by genomic aberrations targeting key regulatory genes. Although fludarabine is the standard first line therapy to treat CLL, only few data are available about the resistance of B cells to this purine nucleoside analog in vivo. Here we sought to increase our understanding of fludarabine action and describe the mechanisms leading to resistance in vivo. We performed an analysis of genomic aberrations, gene expression profiles, and microRNAs expression in CLL blood B lymphocytes isolated during the course of patients' treatment with fludarabine.

Results

In sensitive patients, the differentially expressed genes we identified were mainly involved in p53 signaling, DNA damage response, cell cycle and cell death. In resistant patients, uncommon genomic abnormalities were observed and the resistance toward fludarabine could be characterized based on the expression profiles of genes implicated in lymphocyte proliferation, DNA repair, and cell growth and survival. Of particular interest in some patients was the amplification of MYC (8q) observed both at the gene and transcript levels, together with alterations of myc-transcriptional targets, including genes and miRNAs involved in the regulation of cell cycle and proliferation. Differential expression of the sulfatase SULF2 and of miR-29a, -181a, and -221 was also observed between resistant and sensitive patients before treatment. These observations were further confirmed on a validation cohort of CLL patients treated with fludarabine in vitro.

Conclusion

In the present study we identified genes and miRNAs that may predict clinical resistance of CLL to fludarabine, and describe an interesting oncogenic mechanism in CLL patients resistant to fludarabine by which the complete MYC-specific regulatory network was altered (DNA and RNA levels, and transcriptional targets). These results should prove useful for understanding and overcoming refractoriness to fludarabine and also for predicting the clinical outcome of CLL patients before or early during their treatment.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production






* Albert Einstein College of Medicine has been
awarded Acceditation with Commendation by
the ACCME

Copyright 2025 InterMDnet | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | System Requirements