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Publication : Altered myeloid development and acute leukemia in transgenic mice expressing PML-RAR alpha under control of cathepsin G regulatory sequences.

First Author  Grisolano JL Year  1997
Journal  Blood Volume  89
Issue  2 Pages  376-87
PubMed ID  9002938 Mgi Jnum  J:77881
Mgi Id  MGI:2182851 Doi  10.1182/blood.v89.2.376
Citation  Grisolano JL, et al. (1997) Altered myeloid development and acute leukemia in transgenic mice expressing PML-RAR alpha under control of cathepsin G regulatory sequences. Blood 89(2):376-87
abstractText  Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APML) is characterized by abnormal myeloid development, resulting an accumulation of leukemic promyelocytes that are often highly sensitive to retinoic acid. A balanced t(15;17) (q22;q21) reciprocal chromosomal translocation is found in approximately 90% of APML patients; this translocation fuses the PML gene on chromosome 15 to the retinoic acid receptor alpha (RAR alpha) gene on chromosome 17, creating two novel fusion genes, PML-RAR alpha and RAR alpha-PML. The PML-RAR alpha fusion gene product, which is expressed in virtually all patients with t(15;17), is thought to play a direct role in the pathogenesis of APML. To determine whether PML-RAR alpha is sufficient to cause APML in an animal model, we used the promyelocyte-specific targeting sequences of the human cathepsin G (hCG) gene to direct the expression of a PML-RAR alpha cDNA to the early myeloid cells of transgenic mice. Mice expressing the hCG-PML-RAR alpha transgene were found to have altered myeloid development that was characterized by increased percentages of immature and mature myeloid cells in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, and spleen. In addition, approximately 30% of transgene-expressing mice eventually developed acute myeloid leukemia after a long latent period. The splenic promyelocytes of mice with both the nonleukemic and leukemic phenotypes responded to all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) treatment, which caused apoptosis of myeloid precursors. Although low-level expression of the hCG-PML-RAR alpha transgene is not sufficient to directly cause acute myeloid leukemia in mice, its expression alters myeloid development, resulting in an accumulation of myeloid precursors that may be susceptible to cooperative transforming events.
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