Heterogeneous sensitivity of human acute myeloid leukemia to β-catenin down-modulation

2011 
Dysregulation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway has been observed in various malignancies, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML), where the overexpression of β-catenin is an independent adverse prognostic factor. β-catenin was found upregulated in the vast majority of AML samples and more frequently localized in the nucleus of leukemic stem cells compared with normal bone marrow CD34 + cells. The knockdown of β-catenin, using a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) lentiviral approach, accelerates all-trans retinoic acid-induced differentiation and impairs the proliferation of HL60 leukemic cell line. Using in vivo quantitative tracking of these cells, we observed a reduced engraftment potential after xenotransplantation when β-catenin was silenced. However, when studying primary AML cells, despite effective downregulation of β-catenin we did not observe any impairment of their in vitro long-term maintenance on MS-5 stroma nor of their engraftment potential in vivo. Altogether, these results show that despite a frequent β-catenin upregulation in AML, leukemia-initiating cells might not be 'addicted' to this pathway and thus targeted therapy against β-catenin might not be successful in all patients.
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