Abstract
The Wnt/β-catenin pathway has been implicated in leukemogenesis. We found β-catenin abnormally accumulated in both human acute T cell leukemia Jurkat cells and human erythroleukemia HEL cells. β-Catenin can be significantly down-regulated by the Janus kinase 2 specific inhibitor AG490 in these two cells. AG490 also reduces the luciferase activity of a reporter plasmid driven by LEF/β-catenin promoter. Similar results were observed in HEL cells infected with lentivirus containing shRNA against JAK2 gene. After treatment with 50 µM AG490 or shRNA, the mRNA expression levels of β-catenin, APC, Axin, β-Trcp, GSK3α, and GSK3β were up-regulated within 12-16 h. However, only the protein levels of GSK3β and β-Trcp were found to have increased relative to untreated cells. Knockdown experiments revealed that the AG490-induced inhibition of β-catenin can be attenuated by shRNA targeting β-TrCP. Taken together; these results suggest that β-Trcp plays a key role in the cross-talk between JAK/STAT and Wnt/β-catenin signaling in leukemia cells.
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