Shimamoto T, Ohyashiki K, Ohyashiki J H, Kawakubo K, Fujimura T, Iwama H, Nakazawa S, Toyama K
First Department of Internal Medicine, Tokyo Medical College, Japan.
Blood. 1995 Oct 15;86(8):3173-80.
To understand the clinical implications of transcription factors and their biologic roles during cellular differentiation in the hematopoietic system, we examined the expression of GATA-1, GATA-2, and stem cell leukemia (SCL) gene in human leukemia cell lines and various leukemia patients using the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Cell lines exhibiting megakaryocytic or erythrocytic phenotypes had GATA-1, GATA-2, and SCL gene transcripts, while monocytic cell lines had no detectable GATA-1, GATA-2, or SCL gene mRNA. In some myeloid cell lines, GATA-1 expression, but not SCL gene expression, was detected; GATA-1 expression in HL-60 cells was downregulated during the process of monocytic differentiation. We next examined GATA-1, GATA-2, and SCL gene expression in 110 leukemia samples obtained from 76 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 19 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and 15 with chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis (CML-BC). SCL gene expression was usually accompanied by GATA-1 expression and was preferentially detected in patients with leukemia exhibiting megakaryocytic or erythrocytic phenotypes, while patients with monocytic leukemia were clustered in the group with no detectable GATA-1 expression. None of the patients with ALL or CML-lymphoid-BC expressed SCL. De novo AML patients with SCL gene expression had a lower complete remission (CR) rate and had a significantly poorer prognosis. Among the patients with AML not expressing SCL, a high percentage of patients with CD7+ AML and CD19+ AML had detectable GATA-1, while patients with GATA-1-negative AML had the best CR rate (87.5%). Our results suggest that the expression pattern of transcription factors reflects the lineage potential of leukemia cells, and GATA-1 and SCL gene expression may have prognostic value for the outcome of patients with AML.
为了解转录因子在造血系统细胞分化过程中的临床意义及其生物学作用,我们采用逆转录聚合酶链反应检测了人白血病细胞系及各类白血病患者中GATA-1、GATA-2和干细胞白血病(SCL)基因的表达情况。表现为巨核细胞或红细胞表型的细胞系有GATA-1、GATA-2和SCL基因转录本,而单核细胞系未检测到GATA-1、GATA-2或SCL基因mRNA。在一些髓系细胞系中,检测到了GATA-1的表达,但未检测到SCL基因的表达;HL-60细胞在单核细胞分化过程中GATA-1的表达下调。接下来,我们检测了从76例急性髓系白血病(AML)、19例急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)和15例慢性髓系白血病急变期(CML-BC)患者获取的110份白血病样本中GATA-1、GATA-2和SCL基因的表达。SCL基因表达通常与GATA-1表达相伴,且在表现为巨核细胞或红细胞表型的白血病患者中优先检测到,而单核细胞白血病患者则聚集在未检测到GATA-1表达的组中。ALL或CML-淋巴细胞急变期患者均未表达SCL。有SCL基因表达的初发AML患者完全缓解(CR)率较低,预后明显较差。在不表达SCL的AML患者中,高比例的CD7+AML和CD19+AML患者可检测到GATA-1,而GATA-1阴性的AML患者CR率最佳(87.5%)。我们的结果表明,转录因子的表达模式反映了白血病细胞的谱系潜能,GATA-1和SCL基因表达可能对AML患者的预后具有预测价值。