Publication | Closed Access
Inhibitors of histone deacetylase relieve ETO-mediated repression and induce differentiation of AML1-ETO leukemia cells.
197
Citations
19
References
1999
Year
Histone ModificationsChimeric Fusion ProductEpigenetic ChangeEto-mediated RepressionEpigeneticsTumor BiologyTranscription Repression ComplexHematological MalignancyMyeloid NeoplasiaTranscriptional RegulationCell RegulationAcute Myeloid LeukemiaHistone DeacetylaseAml1-eto Leukemia CellsGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyChromatin FunctionChromatinChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesSystems BiologyMedicine
The (8;21) translocation, found in 12% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), creates the chimeric fusion product, AML1-ETO. Previously, we demonstrated that the ETO moiety recruits a transcription repression complex that includes the histone deacetylase (HDAC1) enzyme. Here, we used inhibitors of HDAC1 to study the pathophysiology of AML1-ETO. Both the potent inhibitor, trichostatin (TSA), and the well-known but less specific inhibitor, phenylbutyrate (PB), could partially reverse ETO-mediated transcriptional repression. PB was also able to induce partial differentiation of the AML1-ETO cell line, Kasumi-1. With the intention of developing a clinically useful protocol, we combined PB with a number of other agents that induced differentiation and apoptosis of Kasumi-1 cells. In summary, transcriptional repression mediated by AML1-ETO appears to play a mechanistic role in the t(8;21) AML, and relief of repression using agents such as PB (alone or in combination) may prove to be therapeutically useful.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1