Acute Leukemia |
* Department of Oncology, the Affiliated of Peoples Hospital, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang, Jiangsu, China
° Central Laboratory of Experimental Hematology, the Affiliated of Peoples Hospital of Jiangsu University, Zhenjing, Jiangsu, China
Correspondence: Professor Wenlin Xu, the Affiliated of Peoples Hospital of Jiangsu University, 8 Dianli Road, Zhenjiang, Jiangsu 212002, P.R.China. Phone: international +86.511.5246930. Fax: international +86.511.5234387. E-mail: XWL0806{at}163.com
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Key words: WT1, isoform, RNA interference, multidrug resistance, P-glycoprotein, leukemia cell, K562, K562/A02.
The Wilms tumor gene (WT1) is now thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of leukemia as well as a wide variety of solid cancers. The WT1 gene is alternatively spliced at two main regions, exon 5 (17 amino acids: 17AA) and the last three codons of exon 9 (KTS), yielding four isoforms: (+17AA/+KTS), (+17AA/–KTS), (–17AA/+KTS), and (–17AA/–KTS).1 All four WT1 isoforms are expressed in primary leukemia cells and each is considered to have a different function in interfering with signaling in cell differentiation, apoptotic and drug resistance pathways. However, the functions of each WT1 isoform in leukemia cells remains controversial. Recently, the co-expression of WT1 and the multidrug resistance related gene (MDR1) has been shown in vitro and in vivo.2 The promoter region of MDR1 has been carefully mapped and an EGR1/SP1/WT1 site at positions –69 to –41 has been identified.3 It is clear that the SP1/EGR1/WT1 site is a key regulatory region for MDR1 transcription, suggesting that WT1 is a potential modulator for leukemia cells multidrug resistance.
In this study, a vector-based shRNA expression system was used (Figure 1A). We selected the target region in exon 5 of WT1/+17AA cDNA and designed WT1/+17AA ShRNA and nonspecific control ShRNA oligonucleotides according to Tushuls principles. Recombinant plasmids were transfected with the LIPOFECTAMINETM2000 transfection reagent into two paired erythroleukemia cell lines: K562 and K562/A02 (sensitive and resistant to doxorubicin, respectively). WT1/+17AA, WT1/–17AA, MDR1 and ß2-MG genes were determined by quantitative real-time PCR using the SYBR green I dye. The primer pairs were designed using the Primer Premier software (version 5.0): WT1/+17AA forward primer 5-AAAGGGAGTTGCTGCTGG-3, reverse primer 5-TGC-CGACCGTACAAGAGT-3(202bp for the product) WT1/–17AA forward primer 5-CACCTTAAAGGGC-CACAG-3, reverse primer 5-TGCCGACCGTACAA-GAGT-3(157 bp for the product) MDR1 forward primer5-CCCATCATTGCAATAGCA-3, reverse primer 5-GTTCAAACTTCTGCTCCTGA-3, (157 bp for the product) ß2-MG forward primer 5-CTCGCGC-TACTCTCTCTTTC-3 reverse primer 5-CATGTCTC-GATCCCACTTAAC-3, (330 bp for product).
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Figure 1. Down-regulation of WT1 exon 5 transcript expression level following treatment with WT1/+17AA ShRNA. A. Schematic presentation of U6 promoter-based ShRNA expression vector. Sequences encoding ShRNA with 19-nt of homology to the target gene are synthesized as 65 bp double-stranded DNA oligonucleotides and inserted downstream of U6 promoter. B. WT1 isoforms mRNA expression was determined by real-time RT-PCR using SYBR green I dye. It was showed that the expression levels of WT1/+17AAN in K562-+17AAR and K562/A02-+17AAR were statistically lower than that in K562-con (*p<0.005) and K562/A02-con (**p<0.001) controls, respectively. C. WT1 isoform protein expressions were detected by Western blotting using monoclonal anti-WT1 antibody and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse secondary antibody. When compared with K562-con and K562/A02-con, there was significant reduction of WT1/+17AA isoform production in both K562-+17AAR (p<0.005) and K562/A02-+17AAR (p<0.001), while there was no significant change in WT1/–17AA expression (p>0.05). There was no difference in actin production among the these groups (p=0.453).
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Figure 2. Representative flow cytometric histograms show the effect of WT1/+17AA ShRNA on the levels of cell surface P-glycoprotein expression and P-glycoprotein mediated rhodamine 123 efflux in both K562 and K562/A02 cells. A. P-glycoprotein is present at very high levels in drug-resistance K562/A02-con cells (53.92) when compared with parental drug-sensitive K562-con cells (4.78) (dark lines). The expression rates of P-gp in K562/A02-+17AAR cells (21.47, blue line) decreased obviously compared to K562/A02-con cells, whereas K562-+17AAR cells (4.54, red line) showed similar results with the K562-con cells. B. The uptake processes in K562 cells were unaffected by WT1/+17AA ShRNA transfection, the K562/+17AAR cells (dashed line) displayed uptake kinetics similar to that of the parental K562-con cells (dotted line), whereas Rh123 uptake was dramatically altered upon transfection with WT1/+17AA ShRNA in K562/A02 cells, the K562/A02-+17AAR cells (solid line) displayed rates of Rh123 accumulation between those of K562-con and K562/A02-con (heavy solid line).
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Funding: this work was supported by a grant from the Jiangsu Natural Science Foundation of China (grant No. K2005017).
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P. Virappane, R. Gale, R. Hills, I. Kakkas, K. Summers, J. Stevens, C. Allen, C. Green, H. Quentmeier, H. Drexler, et al. Mutation of the Wilms' Tumor 1 Gene Is a Poor Prognostic Factor Associated With Chemotherapy Resistance in Normal Karyotype Acute Myeloid Leukemia: The United Kingdom Medical Research Council Adult Leukaemia Working Party J. Clin. Oncol., November 20, 2008; 26(33): 5429 - 5435. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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