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Cell and Tumor Biology |
1 Department of Cell Biology and Signal Transduction, Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Illkirch Cedex, C.U. de Strasbourg; 2 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique UMR 7151, Centre Hayem, Hôpital St. Louis, Paris, France; 3 Dipartimento di Patologia Generale, Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli; 4 Centro di Oncogenomica Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, CEINGE Biotecnologia Avanzata; 5 Ematologia con Trapianto di Cellule Staminali, Ospedale Cardarelli, Naples, Italy; 6 Leukaemia Research Fund Centre at the Institute of Cancer Research; and 7 Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, King's College, London, United Kingdom
Requests for reprints: Hinrich Gronemeyer, Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, B.P. 10142, 67404 Illkirch Cedex, France. Phone: 33-3-8865-3473; Fax: 33-3-8865-3437; E-mail: hg{at}titus.u-strasbg.fr.
| Abstract |
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(RAR
) acute promyelocytic leukemia all other acute myeloid leukemias (AML) are unresponsive to retinoid differentiation therapy. However, elevating the levels of cyclic AMP (cAMP) confers onto retinoid X receptor (RXR)selective agonists ("rexinoids") the ability to induce terminal granulocyte differentiation and apoptosis of all-trans retinoic acidresistant and insensitive AML cells and patients' blasts. Protein kinase A activation leads to corepressor release from the RAR subunit of the RAR-RXR heterodimer, resulting in "desubordination" of otherwise silent RXR, which acquires transcriptional competence in response to cognate ligands. Rexinoid-cAMP induction of endogenous RARß is blunted in mouse embryo fibroblasts lacking RARs, but reintroduction of exogenous RAR
reestablishes responsiveness, thus confirming that the RAR
-RXR heterodimer is the rexinoid mediator. The apoptogenic effect of this treatment involves enhanced expression of the death receptor DR5 and its cognate ligand, tumor necrosis factorrelated apoptosis inducing ligand, both of which are known to induce apoptosis in a tumor cellselective manner and lead to the activation of initiator caspases. Immunohistochemistry confirmed induction of tumor necrosis factorrelated apoptosis inducing ligand and DR5 in AML patient blasts cultured ex vivo. AML patients' blasts responded to rexinoid-cAMP combination treatment with induction of maturation and apoptosis, independent of karyotype, immunophenotype, and French-American-British classification status. Clonogenic assays revealed complete inhibition of blast clonogenicity in four out of five tested samples. Our results suggest that despite the genetic, morphologic, and clinical variability of this disease, the combination of rexinoids and cAMP-elevating drugs, such as phosphodiesterase inhibitors, might lead to a novel therapeutic option for AML patients by inducing a tumor-selective death pathway. | Introduction |
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Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL, classified as FAB M3/M3v) accounts for
5% to 10% of AML cases (1). APL has received particular attention not only as the prototype of successful cancer differentiation therapy which leads to overall survival rates of
70% at 5 years (4, 5), but also because the cause of this leukemia and the success of the all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) therapies are understood in molecular detail. In 98% of cases, APL originates from a t(15;17)(q22;q21) chromosomal translocation, which generates a fusion protein (PML-RAR
) that causes the disease. At the molecular level, the PML fusion with retinoic acid receptor-
(RAR
) results in an enhanced recruitment of histone deacetylase complexes that epigenetically silence cognate gene programs; apparently, this silencing cannot be relieved at physiologic concentrations of ATRA (for reviews, see refs. 6, 711). In addition to the formation of heterochromatin over RAR target genes, the formation of the PML-RAR
fusion protein results in a variety of signaling aberrations that also affect blast survival and self-renewal of stem cells (1217). Supraphysiologic ATRA levels, however, induce dissociation of the silencing complex, activate the differentiation program and, furthermore, activate tumor-selective death signaling (18, 19).
Unfortunately, >90% of AML patients that do not present with the t(15;17) translocation are refractory to ATRA-based differentiation therapy. In addition, APL with the alternative translocation t(11;17)(q23;q21) leading to the formation of the PLZF-RAR
fusion, which is the second most common molecular subgroup of the disease, is generally resistant to classical retinoid therapy (20). Moreover, relapse of APL patients is frequently associated with mutations in the ligand-binding domain of the PML-RAR
fusion protein resulting in abrogation of ligand-binding capacity (21). Thus, there is serious need for additional therapeutic tools to treat patients with AML.
Retinoids are ligands for RAR that heterodimerize with retinoid X receptors (RXR); the corresponding RAR-RXR heterodimers are thought to mediate the retinoid signal. RXRs could, in addition to forming heterodimers with RARs, heterodimerize with a great number of other nuclear receptors (for a general review, see ref. 22). Whereas ATRA is well-accepted to correspond with the endogenous ligand for RARs, the nature, origin, and signaling function of endogenous RXR ligand(s) is still a matter of debate (23). Several synthetic RXR selective ligands have been generated and their analysis revealed that these rexinoids are transcriptionally silent when binding to RXR in heterodimers with nonliganded partners. However, together with retinoids, rexinoids can act synergistically (24). Mechanistic analyses revealed that RAR-bound corepressors do not dissociate from the heterodimer in the absence of a RAR ligand, thus preventing rexinoid-induced recruitment of coactivatorsthis phenomenon is usually referred to as "RXR subordination"whereas the synergy between retinoid and rexinoid agonists is due to the cooperative recruitment of a single coactivator to the heterodimer (23, 25).
There is ample evidence that retinoids are chemotherapeutic and chemopreventive drugs that are also active in non-APL malignancies (6, 2628). Also, rexinoids on their own, despite their subordination in some heterodimers, can exert cancer-preventive activity, although the mechanistic basis has remained elusive (for review, see refs. 29, 30). We have previously shown a further paradigm by which pure rexinoids can spring into action when combined with drugs that elevate cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels. Importantly, such a drug combination exerts antileukemic action even in APL cells that have become resistant to retinoic acid treatment (31), revealing that the signaling is clearly distinct from that induced by retinoic acid. Here, we reveal the mechanistic basis of the so-called "cAMP-rexinoid crosstalk", show that it is mechanistically distinct from the synergy observed between protein kinase A (PKA) agonists and RAR ligands, and report that pure rexinoids, when used together with agents that increase intracellular cAMP levels, induce postdifferentiation apoptosis in ex vivo cultures of AML patient blasts. We show that apoptosis targets the clonogenic blasts and involves activation of the tumor necrosis factorrelated apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL)-DR5 signaling pathway. The analysis of multiple blast cultures reveals that the combinatorial treatment is effective irrespective of the karyotype, immunophenotype, or morphologic features.
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell culture, transfections, and differentiation assays. All leukemia cell lines were cultured in RPMI, 10% FCS, 100 units/mL penicillin, 100 mg/mL streptomycin, 10 mmol/L HEPES, and 2 mmol/L glutamine. Mouse embryo fibroblast (MEF) cells were cultured in DMEM, 10% FCS, 100 units/mL penicillin, 100 mg/mL streptomycin, and 2 mmol/L glutamine. For the PLZF-RAR
APL case (no. 7, Table 1), bone marrow was subjected to Ficoll separation (>90% blasts) and cells were cultured as described (33). For the remaining AML samples (Table 1), peripheral blood containing 80% to 90% leukemic blasts was purified over Ficoll and processed as described (34). This study was approved by the Ethical Committee of the Second University of Naples. Cell morphology was analyzed after May-Grünwald staining. At least 300 cells were analyzed for each treated culture. Each treatment was repeated at least thrice, with each experiment done in triplicates. Transient transfections for transactivation assays were done according to routine procedures using luciferase or CAT reporter genes, the corresponding constructs have been described previously (25). For two-hybrid assays, HeLa cells were transiently transfected with 20 ng of RAR
-VP16 or RAR
S369A-VP16, 40 ng of Gal-SMRT and 200 ng PRKACA per well of a 24-well plate using the calcium phosphate method. Primary MEFs were generated from triple RAR "floxed" (RAR
L2/L2RARßL2/L2RAR
L2/L2) mouse embryos (3537), generously provided by N. Ghyselinck, immortalized by transfection of an expression vector encoding SV40 Tag. Immortalized cells were infected with CRE-expressing adenovirus (a kind gift from M. Giovanini) at a multiplicity of 100 PFU/cell and cloned by limiting dilution. Excision was verified by both PCR on the three RAR loci and failure to induce the transcription of two retinoic acid target genes, RARß and cytochrome P450 26A1 (CYP26A1). RAR
cDNA was reintroduced into excised cells by retroviral transfer followed by G418 selection. Quantitative PCR on the engineered MEFs or U937 hematopoietic cells was done using TaqMan assays for mouse or human RARß and CYP26A1. ß2-Microglobulin and TBP were used as internal controls. Cells were treated with the indicated compounds at a concentration of 106 mol/L for 12 hours. Induction was calculated over the preinduction level of expression, assuming a 100% yield of the PCR assay. Details on the verification of the triple RAR knock-outs, reintroduction of the RAR
expression cassette, and primers used for RARß expression analysis are available on request.
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Differentiation analysis. Cells were harvested and resuspended in 10 µL phycoerythrin-conjugated murine anti-human CD11c (CD11c-PE; IgG1) and 10 µL FITC-coupled murine anti-human CD14 (CD14-FITC; IgG2a; PharMingen, San Diego, CA). As isotypic controls, FITC-conjugated mouse IgG2a and PE-conjugated mouse IgG1 were used. Ex vivo cultured blasts of patient no. 7 (Table 1) were exposed to PE-conjugated murine anti-human CD56 and anti-human CD11b FITC-conjugated mouse monoclonal antibodies (DAKO Corp, Carpinteria, CA), using murine IgG1 antibody (DAKO Corp.) as a negative control. Samples were incubated for 30 minutes at 4°C in the dark, washed in PBS, and resuspended in 500 µL PBS containing propidium iodide (PI; 0.25 µg/mL). Differentiation was determined exclusively for viable PI-negative cells. Cell surface expression of DR5 was measured after rexinoid-PKA agonist exposure (1 µmol/L SR11237; 200 µmol/L 8CPT-cAMP) for 4 days using monoclonal anti-DR5 antibodies (IgG1; Alexis, San Diego, CA) and FITC-coupled secondary antibody. Mouse IgG1 was used as isotypic control.
Nitroblue tetrazolium staining. Cells (1 x 106) resuspended in 500 µL of culture medium were mixed with 500 µL solution containing 0.2% nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) and 200 ng 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (Sigma). After incubation for 30 minutes at 37°C, the formazan deposits were dissolved by 500 µL lysis buffer (50% dimethylformamide, 20% SDS, pH 7.4). The degree of NBT reduction was quantified by measuring OD570.
Apoptosis and cell cycle analyses. Sensitization of PLB985 cells to near sublethal doses of TRAIL by rexinoid-PKA pretreatment was as follows. PLB985 cells were treated for 4 days with 1 µmol/L SR11237 and 200 µmol/L 8CPT-cAMP. Cells were spun down and resuspended in fresh medium, before TRAIL, SR11237, and 8CPT-cAMP were added to final concentrations of, respectively, 25 ng/mL, 1 µmol/L, and 200 µmol/L. Apoptosis was determined after another 4 days by Annexin V staining (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany). Briefly, cells were incubated in buffer [10 mmol/L HEPES/NaOH (pH 7.4), 140 mmol/L NaCl, 2.5 mmol/L CaCl2] containing Annexin V-FITC (1 µg/mL) for 10 minutes in the dark, and resuspended in HEPES buffer containing 0.25 µg/mL PI for fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. Apoptosis was quantitated from the Annexin V-positive PI-negative fraction. The quantification of apoptosis of PLB985 cells after phosphodiesterase inhibitor/rexinoid treatment was done by detection of the 7A6 mitochondrial antigen (which is selectively exposed in cells undergoing apoptosis) using the Apo2.7 antibody (Immunotech, Marseilles, France). Cells (2 x 105) were permeabilized for 20 minutes with 100 µL of cold (4°C) solution of 100 µg/mL digitonin (Sigma) in PBS-2.5% FCS. The cells were washed with cold PBS, incubated for 15 minutes in the dark with 30 µL of a 1:5 dilution of APO2.7 PE-conjugated antibody in PBS-2.5% FCS at room temperature, and analyzed by flow cytometry.
For cell cycle analysis, the AML blasts were resuspended in 500 µL of hypotonic buffer (0.1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium citrate, and 50 µg/mL PI), incubated for 1 hour at room temperature and subjected to FACScalibur acquisition and analysis with ModFit version 3 software (Verity, Topsham, ME). The percentage of cell death in these patient blasts was measured by FACScan analysis of the Annexin V or PI-positive cells.
To quantify caspase activity, pellets of 2 x 106 NB4 cells were lysed in 50 µL of ice-cold lysis buffer, incubated for 10 minutes on ice, and centrifuged for 1 minute at 10,000 x g. Casp-8, and casp-10 colorimetric assays were done according to the supplier's instructions (R&D, Alexis). Briefly, after adding reaction buffer and specific substrates (IETD-pNA for casp-8 and AEVD-pNA for casp-10), samples were incubated for 1 hour at 37°C and the OD405 was determined on a microplate reader.
To block caspase activity after rexinoid-cAMP treatment, pan-caspase (Z-VAD-fmk; R&D, San Diego, CA) inhibitor was added to the culture medium to a final concentration of 100 µmol/L.
RPA assays. To check the expression of rexinoid-cAMP induced mRNAs, multiplex RNase mapping was done. Total RNA was extracted with Trizol (Invitrogen-Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA) and RNase protection assays were done according to the supplier's instructions (PharMingen). Briefly, 4 µg of total RNA and 6 to 8 x 105 cpm of
-[32P]UTP-labeled template sets were used; after RNase treatment, protected probes were resolved on 5% urea-polyacrylamide-bis-acrylamide gels.
Immunoblots and immunohistochemistry. To analyze the expression of DR5, immunoblots were done. Pellets from 5 x 107 NB4 cells were lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer and proteins were separated on 12% acrylamide gels. After blotting, nitrocellulose filters were probed with anti-DR5 antibodies (Sigma). As a positive control, Cos cellexpressed recombinant human DR5 cDNA (provided by Immunex/Genentech, Seattle, WA) was used. For normalization, blots were reprobed with anti-actin antibodies (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies, Santa Cruz, CA).
To detect DR5 and TRAIL by immunohistochemistry, ex vivo treated or nontreated patient blasts were spun onto glass slides, fixed for 10 minutes in 4% formalin, washed in PBS and incubated in 1% H2O2 to inactivate endogenous peroxidase. The slides were washed thrice in PBS, incubated for 1 hour in 4% BSA-2% FCS, washed in PBS, and incubated overnight in PBS-0.2% BSA containing goat anti-DR5 or anti-TRAIL (R&D, Alexis) antibodies. After three washes in PBS, the slides were incubated for 20 minutes with the appropriate biotinylated secondary antibody [anti-goat polyvalent biotinylated IgG (Lab Vision Corp., Fremont, CA)] washed in PBS, incubated for 20 minutes with streptavidine peroxidase (Lab Vision), washed in PBS and processed with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (Lab Vision). After washing in double-distilled water, nuclei were stained with hematoxylin (30 minutes). Finally, the slides were washed for 5 minutes each with H2O, 50%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 100% ethanol, and xylene.
| Results |
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Maturation of PLZFretinoic acid receptor-
acute promyelocytic leukemia blasts. To extend these observations to the blasts of ATRA-insensitive APL patients we assessed the efficacy of the combined treatment to induce maturation of PLZF-RAR
-positive blasts carrying the t(11;17) chromosomal translocation. We used the novel rexinoid BMS749 (38), a potent RXR agonist and simultaneous antagonist of RAR, to exclude the possible effects of serum-borne traces of retinoic acid. Notably, PLZF-RAR
blasts responded with differentiation after 3 days of the treatment as shown by nuclear morphology (Fig. 1A), NBT reduction, and CD11b expression (Fig. 1B and C), as well as by down-regulation of CD56 (Fig. 1C), which is expressed in PLZF-RAR
positive APL (39).
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To assess the clonogenic potential of AML blasts upon treatment, we used fresh blasts and measured colony formation in semisolid medium. Although colonies were readily seen in the nontreated condition, the presence of rexinoid and cAMP occluded colony formation completely (Table 1; see section below), indicating that these compounds affected the actively proliferating fraction of blasts. Similar results have been obtained with the blasts of 11 other non-APL AML patients, irrespective of FAB subtype, karyotype, or immunophenotype. Generally, rexinoid and cAMP induced maturation and subsequent apoptosis (Table 1).
Mechanism of death induction. We have previously observed that in APL cells, ATRA induces the expression of the tumor-selective death ligand, TRAIL (18), which is the cause of retinoid-dependent apoptosis, and defined the molecular basis of TRAIL induction (19). To study the possible implication of this tumor cellselective death-signaling pathway in rexinoid-induced apoptosis in the presence of elevated cAMP levels, we used initially multi-probe RNase mapping to compare in established NB4 APL cells death signaling programs induced by ATRA with those induced by rexinoid-cAMP treatment. Both treatments enhanced TRAIL mRNA levels concomitantly with the onset of apoptosis albeit ATRA was more efficient (Fig. 2A, lanes 6 and 13). Conversely, there was a very strong induction of the TRAIL receptor DR5 mRNA upon rexinoid-cAMP treatment; in fact, the induction was more than one magnitude higher than that seen with ATRA. The same stimulation was also observed at the protein level by immunoblot analysis, which indicated a major stimulation of both DR5 receptor and its splice variant ("DR5 sv") relative to the actin control (Fig. 2B). Increased expression of TRAIL and DR5 was also seen with HL60 and U937 cells (data not shown).
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B, and only minor effects were noted for bcl2 family members, such as bcl2, bfl1/bcl2A1, mcl1, bik, bax, and bak. With respect to cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, the rexinoid-PKA crosstalk resulted in a stimulation of p21 in all cell lines tested, whereas ATRA stimulated predominantly p19 (particularly in PLB985) and to a lesser extent p21 gene expression (ref. 18; data not shown). Thus, as far as the induction of proapoptotic factors is concerned, there is a consistent superinduction of DR5 concomitant with a moderate increase of TRAIL mRNA levels in all cell lines that undergo postmaturation apoptosis in response to the rexinoid-cAMP treatment. Tumor necrosis factorrelated apoptosis inducing ligandDR5 activation in acute myeloid leukemiablasts. As the above data were derived from experiments with established cell lines, we investigated if the expression of TRAIL and its cognate receptor would also be enhanced in AML blasts. Several nont(15;17) AML blasts were cultured ex vivo and exposed to 8CPT-cAMP and SR11237. In all cases, a strong induction of DR5 expression was apparent from immunohistochemical analysis (Fig. 2C, left; DR5 staining appears in brown). The nuclear morphology of the positively staining cells is indicative of terminal differentiation. Rexinoid-cAMP treatment induced also TRAIL expression in the differentiated blasts (Fig. 2C, right). Remarkably, no TRAIL or DR5 expression was seen in cells exhibiting a nondifferentiated phenotype (Fig. 2C, arrows). We conclude from this data that differentiation is a requisite for apoptosis.
Rexinoid crosstalk with phosphodiesterase inhibitors suppresses clonogenic growth of leukemic blasts. Although PKA agonists are not available for clinical use, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, which increase intracellular cAMP by blocking its degradation, are available for therapeutic indications other than leukemia. Theophylline, a pan-phosphodiesterase inhibitor, is used as a bronchodilator, and rolipram, a PDE4-selective inhibitor, is currently being studied in a phase II clinical trial for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (NIH Clinical Research Studies, protocol no. 01-N-0089). As far as rexinoids are concerned, Targretin (bexarotene, LG1069) has been approved for treating cutaneous T cell lymphoma in patients that are refractory to prior systemic therapy.
To investigate whether the phosphodiesterase inhibitors could be as efficient as cAMP, we first exposed PLB985 cells to LG1069 or SR11237 together with one of two pan-phosphodiesterase inhibitors, theophylline or IBMX, or together with the PDE4-selective inhibitor rolipram. All three drug combinations induced differentiation of PLB985 cells, as revealed by CD11c expression (Fig. 4A) and NBT reduction assay, which indicates the production of superoxide, a functional marker for granulocyte differentiation (Fig. 4B). At equal retinoid/rexinoid concentrations, the rexinoid-phosphodiesterase inhibitorinduced differentiation of PLB985 cells was even superior to that seen by 100 nmol/L TTNPB alone and comparable to the TTNPBphosphodiesterase inhibitor crosstalk (Fig. 4C). Apoptosis was induced with similar efficacies by either rexinoid or the retinoid, but required the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor in both cases (Fig. 4D). Note the very strong synergy between the phosphodiesterase inhibitor and rexinoid for the induction of differentiation/apoptosis of PLB985 (Fig. 4) and other AML cells (data not shown), as no differentiation was seen with the phosphodiesterase inhibitors alone, and LG1069 alone induced only a low level of differentiation.
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Desubordination of retinoid X receptor in retinoic acid receptorretinoid X receptor heterodimers by protein kinase A. To assess the molecular basis of the rexinoid-cAMP crosstalk we first studied whether RAR-RXR or other RXR heterodimers would mediate this signaling pathway. We reasoned that strong antagonists selectively targeting the RAR subunit in the RAR-RXR heterodimer should have no effect if RXR heterodimers with other nuclear receptors were the signaling species. We took advantage of well-characterized RAR antagonists, BMS493 and BMS614 (25)8, which do not at all interact with RXRs, and tested if these antagonists would affect PLB985 differentiation induced by LG1069 in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor theophylline (Fig. 5A). As expected, a strong induction of differentiation, which was inhibited by an excess of the RXR-selective antagonist UVI3003 (ref. 32; lane 7), was observed with the rexinoid-theophylline combination, whereas no effect was seen with either of the two agents alone (lanes 2-4). Importantly, however, the pure RAR
antagonist, BMS614, as well as BMS493, a pan-RAR inverse agonist that enforces RAR-corepressor interaction (25), fully blocked the differentiation induced by the rexinoidphosphodiesterase inhibitor combination (lanes 5 and 6), thus indicating that it is indeed the RAR
-RXR heterodimer that responds to the rexinoid in the presence of elevated cAMP levels. In keeping with previous reports (ref. 42 and references therein), RAR agonists also synergize efficiently with agents that increase intracellular cAMP levels, as the combination of ATRA and theophylline at concentrations which alone do not yield significant effects, strongly induce differentiation of PLB985 cells (lanes 2, 8, and 9). This synergy can be blocked by RAR antagonists (lanes 10 and 11) but not by the RXR antagonist UVI3003 (lane 12; note that a weak inhibition is due to contamination of ATRA by 9-cis retinoic acid, no such inhibition was seen with pure RAR ligands), demonstrating that it operates exclusively through the RAR subunit of the heterodimer.
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Our previous work indicated that RXR subordination results from the inability of RXR ligands to displace the corepressor from the heterodimer (25) and evidence has been presented suggesting that synergy between RXR and cAMP might also result from RXR desubordination (43). To assess if corepressor release from apo-RAR could be induced or facilitated by increased cAMP levels we used two-hybrid experiments in HeLa cells (Fig. 5C, left). Importantly, whereas RAR-VP16 interacted strongly with Gal-SMRT (lane 7), coexpression of the cDNA of the catalytic subunit of the human cAMP-dependent protein kinase gene PRKACA blocked this interaction (lane 15) nearly as efficiently as the RAR agonist TTNPB (lane 8). Thus, with respect to corepressor dissociation from the RAR-RXR heterodimer, activation of PKA is an apparent functional equivalent of RAR agonist binding. In parallel experiments in identical experimental conditions, NCoR also dissociated from RAR, albeit less efficiently than in the case of SMRT (data not shown). Two-hybrid experiments with the heterodimer composed of RAR
and RXR
-VP16 confirmed that, in principle, the heterodimer recapitulates the results obtained with RAR
-VP16 (Fig. 5C, right, compare lanes 9 and 19). Thus, PKA activation also destabilizes the interaction between the RAR
-RXR heterodimer and cognate corepressors.
We predicted that RXR desubordination should result in activation of endogenous retinoic acid target genes. Indeed, RARß expression was 53-fold induced by rexinoids in the presence of cAMP (Fig. 5D, lane 4), whereas no significant induction was observed with each agent alone (lanes 2 and 3). Moreover, induction of RARß by either rexinoid-cAMP or ATRA is blunted (Fig. 5E, lanes 3 and 5) in MEFs in which all three RARs have been deleted by using the Cre-lox technology (see Materials and Methods; refs. 3537). This is in perfect agreement with the antagonistic affect of the inverse agonists BMS493 (25) on ATRA and rexinoid-cAMP inductions of RARß (lanes 4 and 6). Most importantly, reintroduction of the RAR
cDNA reestablished RARß responsiveness to both rexinoid-cAMP and ATRA (Fig. 5F, lanes 4 and 5). Note that relative to its induction by ATRA, the induction of RARß by rexinoid-cAMP exposure is significantly enhanced upon RAR
reexpression, indicating that the RAR
-RXR heterodimer is particularly prone to RXR desubordination.
Upstream activation of the protein kinase A signaling pathway leads to rexinoid-dependent myeloid cell differentiation and apoptosis. Given that upon the addition of exogenous cAMP analogues or blocking PDE-mediated cAMP degradation rexinoids could induce differentiation and apoptosis, we wondered if upstream activation of the signaling cascade would replicate the observed events. Indeed, whereas activation of adenylyl cyclase by the diterpene forskolin did not significantly affect PLB985 cell differentiation or apoptosis, addition of the rexinoids SR11237 or LG1069, which alone were without effect, dramatically induced cell differentiation and subsequent apoptosis in a dose- and time-dependent manner (Fig. 5G and H).
| Discussion |
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Our mechanistic analysis shows that it is the RAR
-RXR heterodimer, which mediates the differentiative and apoptogenic effect of the rexinoid-cAMP crosstalk. This is most obvious from the observations that (a) the endogenous retinoic acid target gene, RARß, is activated by rexinoid-cAMP as by ATRA, albeit less efficiently, (b) pure RAR
antagonists or pan-RAR inverse agonists blocked this crosstalk, (c) knock-out of all three RARs blunted both the ATRA and rexinoid-cAMP response, which (d) could be restored by reexpression of RAR
. Thus, we show that the RAR-RXR heterodimer has two distinct options to activate its target program, either through the classical route using RAR agonists or through the combination of rexinoids and agents that increase intracellular cAMP levels (cAMP analogues or phosphodiesterase inhibitors). Note also that in keeping with previous observations (42, 45, 46), the signaling induced by RAR agonists (ATRA or TTNPB) is significantly enhanced in the presence of increased cAMP levels. However, in contrast to the rexinoid-cAMP crosstalk, the retinoid-cAMP crosstalk is insensitive to RXR antagonists, clearly demonstrating that the two mechanisms are fundamentally distinct (see also below).
How to explain the ability of RXR to signal in view of the well-documented RXR-subordination in heterodimers with apo-RAR? Having previously identified persistent corepressor binding to the heterodimer as the cause of RXR subordination (25), using two-hybrid experiments, we assessed the fate of SMRT and NCoR in the presence of elevated cAMP levels. Importantly, RAR
, the signaling receptor in myeloid cells, dissociates from the corepressor upon activation of PKA. Thus, PKA is a functional mimic of an RAR agonist with respect to coregulator binding. We asked if the known phosphorylation of RAR
at Ser369 by PKA (47) could be responsible for this dissociation. However, our preliminary data reveal that activation of PKA still induced the dissociation of corepressors from RAR
S369A (data not shown). Together, our results suggest a mechanism (Fig. 6) wherein signaling events increase cAMP levels, thereby inducing activation of PKA and entry of its catalytic subunit ("c") into the nuclear compartment leading to dissociation of the corepressor complex from RAR
. This results in a "desubordination of RXR allowing RXR agonists to induce coactivator complex recruitment (for mechanistic details, see ref. 25), thus initiating the RAR
-RXR heterodimer-dependent gene programs. Whether phosphorylation of RAR
S369 contributes at all to corepressor dissociation (option 1 in Fig. 6) remains to be established, but other targets are certainly involved. This could be phosphorylation of the corepressor itself (option 2) or of presently unidentified factors (option 3) that acquire the ability to interfere with RAR
-corepressor interaction upon phosphorylation.
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-RXR heterodimer. AML cells are not differentiated by retinoids but we show here that the differentiation and apoptosis program is fully activated by the rexinoid-PKA crosstalk. Thus, in addition to "RXR desubordination," further PKA-dependent gene programs facilitate RAR
-RXRmediated cell differentiation and apoptosis. Our results indicate that the crosstalk between retinoids and PKA should result in the activation of similar differentiation and apoptosis pathways. The precise "master switches" which lead to coordinated activation of the RAR
-RXR heterodimer and PKA induced differentiation and TRAIL-DR5dependent apoptosis remain to be identified. In addition to revealing the mechanistic basis of RXR desubordination, our study provides important information about the apoptogenic program induced by rexinoid-cAMP synergy and the factors involved. We show that the combination of RXR and PKA agonists consistently leads to strongly enhanced expression of the TRAIL receptor DR5 in all myeloid cells tested. In contrast to retinoic acid treatment (18), TRAIL expression is only moderately enhanced and exogenous TRAIL can dramatically increase cell death in PKA-rexinoid pretreated cells. Notably, the induction of DR5 and TRAIL was observed by immunohistochemical staining of several AML patient blast cultures treated ex vivo and staining correlated with a nuclear morphology indicative of cell differentiation. Therefore, it is likely that rexinoid-cAMP signaling induces postmaturation apoptosis through TRAIL-DR5 ligand-receptor activation. However, we do not exclude TRAIL-independent death induction due to highly expressed DR5, because the death domains present in DR5 function as oligomerization interfaces and mere DR5 overexpression leads to TRAIL-independent apoptosis (48). Interestingly, DR5 activation in the absence of TRAIL also induces apoptosis in a tumor cellselective manner as shown with anti-DR5 antibodies that induce receptor oligomerization (49). Thus, up-regulation of DR5 by rexinoid-cAMP might be sufficient to induce AML blast apoptosis. Although our results provide compelling evidence for a contribution of the TRAIL-DR5 signaling to rexinoid-cAMPinduced apoptosis, we do not exclude the additional implication of other death receptors (DR3, DR4), which we see induced in some, but not consistently in all, cell lines tested. The blockage of apoptosis by the pan-caspase inhibitor Z-VAD excludes a significant contribution of caspase-independent death signaling pathways.
We report here for the first time that in the presence of elevated cAMP levels, RXR-selective agonists differentiate and kill blasts derived from AML patients with retinoic acidinsensitive disease. Not only did PLZF-RAR
positive blasts fully differentiate upon this treatment, but non-APL AML blasts that are normally unresponsive to retinoids also underwent differentiation and apoptosis upon RXR-PKA treatment. The possible importance of the signaling option for AML therapy prompted us to look for alternative ways to increase cAMP levels, because to our knowledge, no synthetic cAMP analogue is presently in clinical use. Indeed, it is known that cAMP levels can be also elevated by treating cells with 3',5'-cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitors and the corresponding drugs are already in clinical use for the treatment of neurologic, cardiovascular, or inflammatory disorders (50). Moreover, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, such as the pan-specific theophylline or the PDE4-selective rolipram, can induce apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia concomitantly with elevated cAMP levels. These effects were reported to be cell typedependent, as interleukin-2-cultured whole mononuclear cells and antiimmunoglobulinstimulated CD19 (+) B cells were resistant to the induction of apoptosis by rolipram, whereas unstimulated CD19 (+) B cells were more sensitive (51). Furthermore, the PDE4-selective inhibitor rolipram suppressed the growth of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells (52). As far as rexinoids are concerned, we used LG1069 (53), a rexinoid used for the treatment of cutaneous T cell lymphoma. Initially studying PLB985 cells, we saw a dramatic synergy between each of the three phosphodiesterase inhibitors, theophylline, IBMX, and rolipram, and LG1069 for induction of differentiation. Most importantly, the clonogenic growth potential of AML blasts in ex vivo cultures was completely suppressed by phosphodiesterase inhibitorrexinoid treatment.
Our observations might provide additional options for the treatment of ATRA-resistant or ATRA-insensitive AML. We note in this respect that in a retinoic acid and arsenic trioxideresistant APL patient, the addition of theophylline to the therapeutic protocol yielded a complete clinical remission (46). In view of our results, it is possible that the RXR ligand 9-cis retinoic acid formed from, or present in, the ATRA given to the patient contributed to this response. In view of the low toxicity of rexinoids (6), these observations and the clinical availability of the corresponding drugs provides a rationale for initiating clinical studies addressing the efficacy of combinatorial phosphodiesterase inhibitorrexinoid therapy in AML patients. Together with our recent finding that a very promising class of epigenetic antitumor drugs operates through activation of TRAIL expression (54, 55), the possibility to target both the ligand (TRAIL) by histone deacetylase inhibitors and the cognate receptors (DR4, DR5) by the above described rexinoid crosstalk might present a promising therapeutic option to limit, or even substitute, chemotherapeutic drugs with nongenotoxic signaling compounds.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
We are particularly grateful to Norbert Ghyselinck for providing RAR
L2/L2RARßL2/L2RAR
L2/L2 mouse embryos, Michèle Lieb for cell culture, FACS analysis, MEF establishment, and PCR analysis of "floxed" and excised alleles of the three RAR isotypes, Stéphanie Duffort for real-time PCR analysis, Audrey Bindler for transfections, M. Giovanni for the CRE-expressing adenovirus, Angel de Lera for UVI3003, C. Zusi of Bristol-Myers Squibb for synthetic retinoids, Genentech/Immunex for the TRAIL and TRAIL receptor cDNAs, Yvon Cayre for PLB985 cells, and Dominic Culligan for providing some patient blasts.
| Footnotes |
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8 Germain et al., manuscript in preparation. ![]()
Received 10/ 4/04. Revised 6/ 8/05. Accepted 6/17/05.
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