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News Release
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Aug. 21, 2006 -- No. 384 |
Study identifies molecular process underlying leukemia
CHAPEL HILL - New research from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill has identified a molecular process in cells that is crucial to
the development of two common leukemias.
The findings help explain how fundamental cell processes go awry during cancer
development and represent a first step toward new, targeted treatments for leukemia.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) leukemias
develop when certain chromosomal abnormalities disrupt the genes that control
blood cell formation. Without the proper instructions from these genes, blood
cells produced by bone marrow never fully mature; these immature cells, which
can't carry vital nutrients or fight infection, then flood the body.
The researchers showed how a fusion of proteins created by flawed chromosomes
can trigger leukemia development. The study also identified an enzyme's important
role in this process.
The results were published online Aug. 20 and will appear in a future print
issue of the journal Nature Cell Biology.
The research was led by Dr. Yi Zhang, professor of biochemistry and biophysics
in the UNC School of Medicine and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.
Zhang is also a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. The
work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.
The study examined chromosomal translocation, in which a fragment of a chromosome
breaks off and joins another. Chromosomes are the cellular structures that carry
DNA. Translocation along chromosomes can result in the generation of fusion
proteins that often "misregulate" specific genes, including genes
that can cause leukemia, and is a common cause of leukemia, Zhang said.
The most common chromosome translocations found in leukemia patients involve
the mixed lineage leukemia gene, MLL. One of the fusion proteins that partners
with MLL in leukemia is AF10.
AF10 has been shown to fuse with another protein, CALM, in patients with acute
lymphoblastic leukemia or acute myeloid leukemia. But it has been unclear whether
that fusion could cause leukemia, and little is known about how this CALM-AF10
fusion may lead to the disease, Zhang said. "Results from this study provide
important insights into these questions," he said.
Zhang and his colleagues showed that the CALM-AF10 fusion is "necessary
and sufficient" for cellular transformation to leukemia in a mouse model
of the disease. They also discovered that the fusion overactivates (also called
upregulation) the gene HoxA5. Moreover, upregulation of the HoxA5 gene is necessary
for cellular transformation to leukemia, the study shows.
Overactive Hox genes are known to play a role in cancer, Zhang said. "In
mammals, Hox genes play an important role in embryonic development. They help
set the developmental pattern. They also play a role in cancer. That's why their
expression must be tightly controlled."
The researchers also identified an enzyme, hDOT1L, as important for upregulating
gene expression by the CALM-AF10 fusion protein. This finding builds on earlier
work by the Zhang laboratory involving another fusion protein, MLL-AF10, and
the enzyme's upregulation of the Hox gene HoxA9.
Having demonstrated the role of hDOT1L in leukemia development of two different
fusion proteins, the Zhang lab is exploring the possibility of developing drugs
that target the hDOT1L enzyme. "Understanding the molecular mechanism underlying
leukemia development will certainly help in this endeavor, Zhang said.
UNC co-authors include postdoctoral researchers Drs. Yuki Okada and Qi Jiang,
and Lineberger Cancer Center researcher Lishan Su. Other authors are Dr. Margot
Lemieux and Dr. Lucie Jeanotte from the Center for Research at Hotel-Dieu Medical
Center of Quebec, in Montreal.
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Note: A photo of Zhang is available by clicking on http://www.unc.edu/news/pics/faculty/zhang_yi.JPG
School of Medicine contact: Les Lang, 919-843-9687 or llang@med.unc.edu
Lineberger Center contact: Dianne Shaw, 919-966-7834 or dgs@med.unc.edu
News Services contact: Becky Oskin, 919-962-8596 or becky_oskin@med.unc.edu