Department of Neuroscience, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19140, United States.
Exp Mol Pathol. 2013 Dec;95(3):249-54. doi: 10.1016/j.yexmp.2013.08.001. Epub 2013 Sep 13.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a malignant proliferative disorder in which leukemic cells fail to terminally differentiate and accumulate in the blood and bone marrow. Standard AML therapy requires intensive chemotherapy with a low rate of durable remission and is associated with significant treatment-related toxicity, especially in elderly patients. Therefore, new therapeutic options for the treatment of AML are urgently needed. We previously reported that the novel angiogenic inhibitor, angiocidin, induces differentiation of monocytes to macrophages. Here we investigate the effects of angiocidin on AML cells lines and primary AML cells. Differentiation was assessed by flow cytometry measuring the increase in expression of cell surface marker characteristic of normal macrophages. Four AML cell lines (THP-1, Mono-mac-1, HL-60 and MV4-11) and 5 of 10 primary human AML samples showed evidence of differentiation when cultured in vitro for 24 h with 10 μg/mL angiocidin. Additionally, we found that angiocidin promoted secretion of a number of cytokines from the cell lines as well as patient cells. We next evaluated the effect of angiocidin on a xenotransplanted primary human AML sample engrafted in NSG mice. We found angiocidin monotherapy reduced the human AML burden in bone marrow by 63% relative to untreated control. Interestingly, angiocidin+cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) combination therapy reduced human AML in bone marrow by 79%. We believe the combination of in vitro data supporting the capacity of angiocidin to drive differentiation in multiple AML cell lines and primary human AML samples and its activity in a xenotransplantation model that reproduces the human disease is significant. These observations support the continued evaluation and development of angiocidin as a potential novel, non-toxic therapy for AML.
急性髓系白血病 (AML) 是一种恶性增殖性疾病,其中白血病细胞不能终末分化并在血液和骨髓中积聚。标准的 AML 治疗需要强化化疗,但缓解率低,且与显著的治疗相关毒性相关,尤其是在老年患者中。因此,迫切需要新的 AML 治疗选择。我们之前报道过,新型血管生成抑制剂血管抑素可诱导单核细胞向巨噬细胞分化。在这里,我们研究了血管抑素对 AML 细胞系和原代 AML 细胞的影响。通过流式细胞术测量表面标志物表达的增加来评估分化,这些标志物是正常巨噬细胞的特征。当在体外用 10μg/mL 血管抑素培养 24 小时时,4 个 AML 细胞系(THP-1、Mono-mac-1、HL-60 和 MV4-11)和 10 个原代人类 AML 样本中的 5 个显示出分化的证据。此外,我们发现血管抑素促进了细胞系和患者细胞中多种细胞因子的分泌。接下来,我们评估了血管抑素对异种移植的原代人类 AML 样本在 NSG 小鼠中的影响。我们发现,与未治疗的对照组相比,血管抑素单药治疗使骨髓中的人类 AML 负担减少了 63%。有趣的是,血管抑素+阿糖胞苷 (Ara-C) 联合治疗使骨髓中的人类 AML 减少了 79%。我们认为,支持血管抑素在多种 AML 细胞系和原代人类 AML 样本中驱动分化的体外数据及其在复制人类疾病的异种移植模型中的活性的结合是重要的。这些观察结果支持继续评估和开发血管抑素作为 AML 的一种潜在新型、无毒疗法。