BMI-1 is highly expressed in M0-subtype acute myeloid leukemia

Recent studies have suggested that one of the polycomb group genes, BMI-1, has an important role in the maintenance of normal and leukemic stem cells by repressing the INK4a/ARF locus. Here, we quantitatively examined BMI-1 expression level in samples from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML)...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of hematology 2005-07, Vol.82 (1), p.42-47
Hauptverfasser: SAWA, Masashi, YAMAMOTO, Kazuhito, ASOU, Norio, HAMAJIMA, Nobuyuki, EMI, Nobuhiko, NAOE, Tomoki, YOKOZAWA, Toshiya, KIYOI, Hitoshi, HISHIDA, Asahi, KAJIGUCHI, Tomohiro, SETO, Masao, KOHNO, Akio, KITAMURA, Kunio, ITOH, Yoshie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent studies have suggested that one of the polycomb group genes, BMI-1, has an important role in the maintenance of normal and leukemic stem cells by repressing the INK4a/ARF locus. Here, we quantitatively examined BMI-1 expression level in samples from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other hematologic malignancies. Moderate to high BMI-1 expression was detected in AML patients, and the BMI-1 expression levels in AML samples were significantly higher than in normal bone marrow controls (P = .0011). Specimens of French-American-British classification subtype M0 showed higher relative expression of the BMI-1 transcript (median, 390.2 3 10(-3)) than the other subtypes (median, 139.0 3 10(-3)) (P < .0001). Leukemia other than AML showed low to moderate expression. INK4a-ARF transcript expression tended to be inverse proportion to that of BMI-1. In an M0 patient with a high BMI-1 transcript level, the INK4a-ARF transcript level fell promptly and maintained a low value after the patient achieved complete remission. These results indicated that a subgroup of M0 patients has a high expression level of polycomb group gene BMI-1, which may contribute to leukemogenesis.
ISSN:0925-5710
1865-3774
DOI:10.1532/ijh97.05013