Abstract

The effects of bryostatin 1 (Bryo 1), a protein kinase C (PKC) activator, on proliferation, differentiation and macromolecular synthesis were investigated in the two cell lines EHEB and JVM-2, established from patients with chronic B-cell leukemia. Treatment with Bryo 1 inhibited the proliferation, DNA and RNA synthesis in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. The cells differentiated along the B-cell pathway to plasmacytoid cells as judged by morphological examination and increased their production and secretion of immunoglobulins. c-myc mRNA expression was induced in both cell lines. The phorbol ester TPA, a pharmacological PKC activator, had similar differentiation-inducing effects. The biomodulators failed to induce significant alterations in the cell surface marker profile. Except for their surface markers, all parameters studied were more strongly altered in JVM-2 than in EHEB cells. JVM-2 was established from a patient with B-prolymphocytic leukemia (PLL), whereas EHEB originated from a case of B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). These data support the notion that PLL cells appear to be activated B-cells, in contrast to the rather quiescent CLL cells. Since Bryo 1 lacks tumor-promoting activity, this naturally occurring compound, extracted from marine animals, has a potential role in the therapy of B-cell neoplasms as a differentiating agent.

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