Abstract

Disrupting the protective signals provided by the bone marrow microenvironment will be critical for more effective combination drug therapies for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Cells of the osteoblast lineage that reside in the endosteal niche have been implicated in promoting survival of AML cells. Here, we investigated how to prevent this protective interaction. We previously showed that SDF-1, a chemokine abundant in the bone marrow, induces apoptosis of AML cells, unless the leukemic cells receive protective signals provided by differentiating osteoblasts (8, 10). We now identify a novel signaling pathway in differentiating osteoblasts that can be manipulated to disrupt the osteoblast-mediated protection of AML cells. Treating differentiating osteoblasts with histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) abrogated their ability to protect co-cultured AML cells from SDF-1-induced apoptosis. HDACi prominently up-regulated expression of the Nherf1 scaffold protein, which played a major role in preventing osteoblast-mediated protection of AML cells. Protein phosphatase-1α (PP1α) was identified as a novel Nherf1 interacting protein that acts as the downstream mediator of this response by promoting nuclear localization of the TAZ transcriptional modulator. Moreover, independent activation of either PP1α or TAZ was sufficient to prevent osteoblast-mediated protection of AML cells even in the absence of HDACi. Together, these results indicate that HDACi target the AML microenvironment by enhancing activation of the Nherf1-PP1α-TAZ pathway in osteoblasts. Selective drug targeting of this osteoblast signaling pathway may improve treatments of AML by rendering leukemic cells in the bone marrow more susceptible to apoptosis.

Highlights

  • histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) are being explored as treatments for diverse malignancies

  • Preliminary studies conducted predominantly in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines suggested that osteoblasts protect AML cells expressing high levels of CXCR4 from this SDF-1-induced apoptosis [8]

  • These results indicate that osteoblasts provide protective signals to AML cells within the bone marrow microenvironment

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Summary

Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors Target the Leukemic

Microenvironment by Enhancing a Nherf1-Protein Phosphatase 1␣-TAZ Signaling Pathway in Osteoblasts*. We previously showed that SDF-1, a chemokine abundant in the bone marrow, induces apoptosis of AML cells, unless the leukemic cells receive protective signals provided by differentiating osteoblasts [8, 10]. We show that increased Nherf activates a novel signaling pathway in osteoblasts by binding PP1␣, which promotes TAZ nuclear localization and inhibits the ability of osteoblasts to protect AML cells from apoptosis while having little effect on osteoblast differentiation. Together, these results identify several members of a novel molecular signaling pathway within osteoblasts that could be targeted in AML to ameliorate the leukemic cell protective effects of the endosteal niche

Experimental Procedures
Reverse primer
Results
Discussion
Full Text
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