학술논문

The role of AP-1 in glucocorticoid resistance in leukaemia
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Leukemia. 15(3):391-397
Subject
AP-1
Fos
Jun
glucocorticoids
ALL
CLL
Language
English
ISSN
0887-6924
1476-5551
Abstract
Glucocorticoids are used in the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) but many patients develop glucocorticoid resistance on relapse. The ligand-activated glucocorticoid receptor inhibits activity of the AP-1 transcription factor and the purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that up-regulation or over-expression of AP1-binding activity may be an important mechanism of glucocorticoid resistance in ALL and CLL. In vitro sensitivity of patient blasts to prednisolone was measured using the MTT assay. AP-1 levels were quantified by gel shift analysis and Fos and Jun levels were compared by Western blotting. To test for a relationship between glucocorticoid sensitivity and glucocorticoid-induced changes in AP-1 binding activity, leukaemic blasts were also treated with prednisolone before analysis. Sensitivity of patient blasts to prednisolone varied, with IC50 values varying over a concentration range from 10−11 to 10−4M. Fos and Jun protein were detectable in all patient samples over a 300-fold range in relative expression, but did not correlate with prednisolone sensitivity. Gel-shift analysis demonstrated the presence of specific AP-1-response-element-binding activity in all patient samples, but this did not correlate with prednisolone sensitivity. Furthermore, there was no relationship between prednisolone-induced changes in AP-1 binding activity and in vitro glucocorticoid resistance. These data show that glucocorticoid resistance is not associated with increased AP-1 binding activity or changes in the level of the Fos and Jun components of AP-1.