학술논문

Valproate Activates Bovine Leukemia Virus Gene Expression, Triggers Apoptosis, and Induces Leukemia/Lymphoma Regression in vivo
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2005 Jul . 102(29), 10309-10314.
Subject
Gene activation therapy
Histone deacetylase
Immune response
Mononuclear leukocytes
Bovine leukemia virus
Leukemia
Apoptosis
Infections
HeLa cells
Viruses
Tumors
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
Abstract
Leukemogenic viruses like human T-lymphotropic virus and bovine leukemia virus (BLV) presumably persist in the host partly by latent integration of the provirus in a fraction of infected cells, leading to accumulative increase in the outgrowth of transformed cells. Furthermore, viral infection also correlates with a blockade of the apoptotic mechanisms concomitant with an apparent latency of the host cell. Conceptually, induction of viral or cellular gene expression could thus also be used as a therapeutic strategy against retroviral-associated leukemia. Here, we provide evidence that valproate, an inhibitor of deacetylases, activates BLV gene expression in transient transfection experiments and in short-term cultures of primary B-lymphocytes. In vivo, valproate injection into newly BLV-inoculated sheep did not abrogate primary infection. However, valproate treatment, in the absence of any other cytotoxic drug, was efficient for leukemia/lymphoma therapy in the sheep model leading to decreased lymphocyte numbers (respectively from 25.6, 35.7, and 46.5× 10 3 cells per mm 3 to 1.0, 10.6, and 24.3× 10 3 cells per mm 3 in three leukemic sheep) and tumor regression (from >700 cm 3 to undetectable). The concept of a therapy that targets the expression of viral and cellular genes might be a promising treatment of adult T cell leukemia or tropical spastic paraparesis/human T-lymphotropic virus-associated myelopathy, diseases for which no satisfactory treatment exists so far.