Reverse-phase protein microarrays (RPPA) as a diagnostic and therapeutic guide in multidrug resistant leukemia
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2011
Abstract:
Reverse-phase microarray assays using phosphospecific
antibodies (RPPA) can directly measure levels of
phosphorylated protein isoforms. In the current study, lysates
from parental and multidrug resistant (MDR) CEM leukemia
cells were spotted onto reverse-phase protein microarrays
and probed with a panel of phospho-antibodies to ERK, PCK
and Akt pathways. In particular, the Akt pathway is considered
to play significant roles in leukemia and Akt inhibitor therapy
has been proposed as a potential tool in the treatment of this
disease. The RPPA data prompted us to investigate deeper
this pathway. Here, we found that whereas total Akt1 protein
level is higher in parental CEM cells, the activated isoform
content, p-Akt1, increases in doxorubicin-selected CEM cells
(MDR-CEM). This was backed up by Western blot analysis,
confirming that Akt1 activity/phosphorylation may be upregulated
in MDR-CEM cells. Further exploration of inhibitory
therapy in this system was evaluated. The TNF-related
apoptosis-inducing ligand, TRAIL, has been shown to
selectively kill tumor cells. Herein, we describe that in MDRCEM
cells TRAIL responsiveness correlates with a reduced
expression of endogenous Akt1, suggesting that the MDR
phenotype associated to P-gp sensitizes cells to TRAIL therapy.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
RPPA; MDR; TRAIL; Akt/PKB; phosphorylation
Elenco autori:
Marmiroli, Sandra; Vitale, Marco
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