The goal of this renewal application is to elucidate further the basis by which agents that down-regulate (bryostatin 1) or inhibit (UCN-01, safingol) protein kinase C (PKC) promote leukemic cell apoptosis by ara-C and other nucleoside analogs. Evidence generated during the preceding period of support suggests that interruption of the PKC signal transduction pathway may promote cell death by three distinct mechanisms: (a) dysregulation of cell cycle-related events, particularly induction of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs); (b) redirection of signals away from cytoprotective survival (e.g., MAPK/ERK) toward stress-related (e.g., SAPK/JNK) pathways; and (c) phosphorylation of the Bcl-2 protein, promoting mitochondrial permeability transition and circumvention of the block to capase activation. To examine these possibilities, (1) Human leukemic cells (HL-60, U937) stably overexpressing Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, and phosphorylation loop deletant mutants will be employed to determine whether phosphorylation of anti-apoptotic proteins is responsible for potentiation of ara-C mediated apoptosis by PKC inhibition/down-regulation, (2) Analogously, HL-60 and U937 cells expressing antisense p21WAF1+/-p27KIP1 will be used to characterize the effect of CDKI dysregulation on ara-C mediated apoptosis and its potentiation by PKC inhibitors/down-regulators, (3) The effects of enforced expression of p53 will be examined with respect to leukemic cell differentiation and modulation of ara-C induced cell death by bryostatin 1/PKC inhibitors, (4) Direct evidence for the participation of stress and survival pathways in cell death decisions will be obtained through the use of SEK1/JNK1 dominant-negative and ER-inducible Raf/MAPK mutants, (5) Findings will be extended to include another clinically important nucleoside analog, 2,2(1)-difluorodeoxcytidine (gemcitabine) and (6) Finally, the ability of pharmacologically relevant concentrations of bryostatin 1, UCN-01, and safingol to potentiate ara-C- (and gemcitabine)-mediated apoptosis in primary leukemic myeloblasts ex vivo will be explored. Information derived from these studies will lay the foundation for a novel approach to leukemia therapy aimed at enhancing the activity of effective antileukemic drugs via combination with agents that interrupt the PKC signal transduction pathway.
Showing the most recent 10 out of 216 publications