Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10907286 Experimental Hematology 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Inactivating mutations in IKZF1, the gene that encodes the transcription factor IKAROS, are recurrent in poor-prognosis human B-cell leukemias, in which these mutations co-exist with BCR-ABL1 or other genetic changes that activate similar intracellular signaling pathways. However, little is known about the mechanism(s) by which loss of IKAROS activity may co-operate with BCR-ABL1 to transform lymphoid cells. To investigate this question, we used expression of a dominant-negative isoform of IKAROS (IK6) to suppress endogenous IKAROS activity in the interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent mouse pro-B BA/F3 cell line and in an IL-3-independent BCR-ABL1+ derivative. We then used intracellular phospho-flow cytometry to assess the effects of BCR-ABL1 and IK6, alone and in combination, on the signaling state of the cells before and after their stimulation with IL-3. BCR-ABL1 and IK6 each produced a constitutively activated signaling phenotype and also enhanced the signaling responses of BA/F3 cells to IL-3. These effects, however, were neither equivalent nor additive, and IK6 alone was insufficient to confer the IL-3-independent growth characteristic of BCR-ABL1+ BA/F3 cells. In addition to its effects on lymphoid cells, IK6 also induced constitutively activated signaling in a subset of myeloid leukemia cell lines. Together, these studies indicate an ability of IK6 to enhance intracellular signaling in both lymphoid and myeloid cells, but not to synergize with BCR-ABL1 in this model system.
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