Abstract

Abstract 3518Within the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment, BM mesenchymal stromal cells (BM-MSC) provide leukemia cells with a rich environment that serves as a sanctuary and protects them from chemotherapeutic agents. Interactions between leukemia cells and BM-MSC are thought to change the behavior of both stroma and leukemia cells resulting in an increased resistance to standard drugs. To discover interaction-induced changes in BM-MSCs that might promote microenvironment-mediated chemoresistance we used genome-wide gene expression profiling to study normal-donor BM-MSCs co-cultured with REH cells, a pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cell line. Upregulated genes in normal-donor BM-MSCs by co-culture included many cytokines and chemokines and implicated activation of NF-κB in BM-MSCs. Similar results were obtained by co-culturing normal-donor BM-MSCs with OCI-AML3 cells, an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell line. Increased expression of NF-κB target genes in BM-MSCs was also induced by co-culture with primary cells from ALL and AML patients, suggesting that NF-κB activation is a common consequence of leukemia-stroma interaction. Blocking canonical-pathway NF-κB activation by overexpressing a super-repressor form of IκBα in BM-MSC, significantly reduced stroma-mediated chemoresistance to vincristine (VCR) of leukemia cells in vitro and in vivo using an extramedullary bone marrow model. When small-molecule IKKβ inhibitors (MLN3316 and CDDO-Me) were used in co-cultures, blocking canonical-pathway NF-κB activation in ALL cell lines (REH or RS4;11) as well as BM-MSCs, the apoptotic effects of VCR on leukemia cells were further increased. Conclusion:results indicate that leukemia cells activate NF-κB in stromal cells and that such activation is in turn essential to promote survival of leukemia cells during chemotherapy. Targeting NF-κB in BM-MSC may ameliorate stroma-mediated chemoresistance and help in eliminating BM-resident leukemia cells. Disclosures:No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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