tretinoin and Chromosomal-Instability

tretinoin has been researched along with Chromosomal-Instability* in 2 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for tretinoin and Chromosomal-Instability

ArticleYear
MN1 overexpression induces acute myeloid leukemia in mice and predicts ATRA resistance in patients with AML.
    Blood, 2007, Sep-01, Volume: 110, Issue:5

    Overexpression of wild-type MN1 is a negative prognostic factor in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with normal cytogenetics. We evaluated whether MN1 plays a functional role in leukemogenesis. We demonstrate using retroviral gene transfer and bone marrow (BM) transplantation that MN1 overexpression rapidly induces lethal AML in mice. Insertional mutagenesis and chromosomal instability were ruled out as secondary aberrations. MN1 increased resistance to all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA)-induced cell-cycle arrest and differentiation by more than 3000-fold in vitro. The differentiation block could be released by fusion of a transcriptional activator (VP16) to MN1 without affecting the ability to immortalize BM cells, suggesting that MN1 blocks differentiation by transcriptional repression. We then evaluated whether MN1 expression levels in patients with AML (excluding M3-AML) correlated with resistance to ATRA treatment in elderly patients uniformly treated within treatment protocol AMLHD98-B. Strikingly, patients with low MN1 expression who received ATRA had a significantly prolonged event-free (P = .008) and overall (P = .04) survival compared with patients with either low MN1 expression and no ATRA, or high MN1 expression with or without ATRA. MN1 is a unique oncogene in hematopoiesis that both promotes proliferation/self-renewal and blocks differentiation, and may become useful as a predictive marker in AML treatment.

    Topics: Aged; Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Biomarkers, Tumor; Bone Marrow Cells; Cell Cycle; Cell Differentiation; Cell Transformation, Viral; Chromosomal Instability; Disease-Free Survival; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; Gene Expression Regulation, Leukemic; Hematopoiesis; Herpes Simplex Virus Protein Vmw65; Humans; Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute; Male; Middle Aged; Mutagenesis, Insertional; Predictive Value of Tests; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Repressor Proteins; Retroviridae; Risk Factors; Survival Rate; Trans-Activators; Transduction, Genetic; Tretinoin; Tumor Suppressor Proteins

2007

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for tretinoin and Chromosomal-Instability

ArticleYear
Retinoic acid-treated pluripotent stem cells undergoing neurogenesis present increased aneuploidy and micronuclei formation.
    PloS one, 2011, Volume: 6, Issue:6

    The existence of loss and gain of chromosomes, known as aneuploidy, has been previously described within the central nervous system. During development, at least one-third of neural progenitor cells (NPCs) are aneuploid. Notably, aneuploid NPCs may survive and functionally integrate into the mature neural circuitry. Given the unanswered significance of this phenomenon, we tested the hypothesis that neural differentiation induced by all-trans retinoic acid (RA) in pluripotent stem cells is accompanied by increased levels of aneuploidy, as previously described for cortical NPCs in vivo. In this work we used embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells, embryonic stem (ES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells undergoing differentiation into NPCs. Ploidy analysis revealed a 2-fold increase in the rate of aneuploidy, with the prevalence of chromosome loss in RA primed stem cells when compared to naïve cells. In an attempt to understand the basis of neurogenic aneuploidy, micronuclei formation and survivin expression was assessed in pluripotent stem cells exposed to RA. RA increased micronuclei occurrence by almost 2-fold while decreased survivin expression by 50%, indicating possible mechanisms by which stem cells lose their chromosomes during neural differentiation. DNA fragmentation analysis demonstrated no increase in apoptosis on embryoid bodies treated with RA, indicating that cell death is not the mandatory fate of aneuploid NPCs derived from pluripotent cells. In order to exclude that the increase in aneuploidy was a spurious consequence of RA treatment, not related to neurogenesis, mouse embryonic fibroblasts were treated with RA under the same conditions and no alterations in chromosome gain or loss were observed. These findings indicate a correlation amongst neural differentiation, aneuploidy, micronuclei formation and survivin downregulation in pluripotent stem cells exposed to RA, providing evidence that somatically generated chromosomal variation accompanies neurogenesis in vitro.

    Topics: Aneuploidy; Animals; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Nucleus; Chromosomal Instability; Embryonic Stem Cells; Humans; Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells; Mice; Neurogenesis; Pluripotent Stem Cells; Tretinoin

2011