Multiple myeloma (MM), characterized by an accumulation of malignant plasma cells in the bone marrow (BM), is the most common bone malignancy in the United States. Although chemotherapy is the most effective treatment, the majority of patients experience relapse and die of the disease. The major cause of treatment failure is the development of multidrug resistance. The BM microenvironment confers MM chemoresistance. Deducing how the BM creates a microenvironment friendly to MM cells and confers resistance is thus the key to overcoming drug resistance and greatly improving patient survival. Recently we discovered that human MM- derived MIF (macrophage migration inhibitory factor) regulates the homing or affinity of MM cells for BM and, as a result, their sensitivity to chemotherapy. MIF is highly expressed by human MM cells and the expression levels positively correlate with advanced disease and poor survival in patients. Surprisingly, knocking down MIF in MM cells impaired their adhesion to BM stromal cells (BMSCs) in vitro and led to formation of extramedullary tumors in SCID mice. More importantly, MIF-knockdown human MM cells were more sensitive, compared with control cells, to chemotherapy in SCID mice because chemotherapy effectively eradicated extramedullary but not intramedullary tumors in the host. Inhibiting MIF activity in MM cells (cell lines and primary MM cells from patients) by the MIF inhibitor (4-IPP) or neutralizing mAbs also resulted in impaired adhesion to BMSCs in vitro and formation of extramedullary tumors in SCID and SCID-hu mice without affecting tumor burdens. Furthermore, MM-(transwell)-conditioned human BMSCs mediated stronger adhesion to MM cells, provided greater protection to MM cells against chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, and attracted more monocytes than MIF-knockdown MM-conditioned BMSCs. Based on these novel findings, we hypothesize that high MIF in MM cells contributes to poor patient survival by enhancing the affinity of MM cells for BM and by conditioning BM to become a MM-friendly microenvironment, leading to enhanced MM growth and survival and induction of drug resistance.
Aim 1 will elucidate the mechanisms of MM-derived MIF in regulating MM homing to and affinity for BM.
Aim 2 will determine the importance and mechanisms of MM- derived MIF in conditioning BM to become a MM-friendly microenvironment, and Aim 3 will determine and validate the role of MM-expressing MIF in patients with MM. Accomplishing these aims will provide the justification and tools for developing novel and effective strategies to target MIF to improve the therapeutic efficacy of chemotherapy. The proposed studies will also lead to a better understanding of the fundamental mechanisms underlying MM homing or metastasis to the bone and MM conditioning the microenvironment, and could pave the way to the first substantial improvements in current MM treatment by mobilizing MM cells away from the protective BM microenvironment.
In this project we will determine the roles of a special molecule, called macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), in regulating tumor cell affinity for the bone marrow of patients with multiple myeloma. We hypothesize that MIF is crucial to myeloma cell retention in the bone marrow and to myeloma drug resistance, and targeting MIF will significantly improve chemotherapy efficacy in patients. In this project, we will examine how MIF induces drug resistance in myeloma cells and how to target this molecule to enhance myeloma cell sensitivity to chemotherapy in patients.
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