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Leukemia
January 2000, Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 77 - 83
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Title

The impact of differential binding of wild-type RAR, PML-, PLZF- and NPM-RAR fusion proteins towards transcriptional co-activator, RIP-140, on retinoic acid responses in acute promyelocytic leukemia

CW So1, S Dong2, CKC So1, GX Cheng2, QH Huang3, SJ Chen3 & LC Chan1

1Department of Pathology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

2Shanghai Transgenic Research Center, Shanghai, China

3Shanghai Institute of Hematology, Shanghai Second Medical University, Shanghai, China

Correspondence to: LC Chan, Department of Pathology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong; Fax: 852 28 17 75 65
The first two authors contributed equally to this work


Abstract

Retinoic acid receptor (RA) heterodimer (RAR/RXR) activities have been shown to be repressed by transcriptional co-repressor, SMRT/N-CoR, in the absence of the ligand while upon all-trans retionic acid (ATRA) treatment, SMRT/N-CoR is dissociated from RARalpha leading to gene expression by the recruitment of transcriptional co-activators to the transcriptional complex. The difference in response to ATRA therapy between acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) patients with PML-RARalpha fusion and PLZF-RARalpha fusion has recently been found to be partially due to the strong association of the transcriptional co-repressor, SMRT/N-CoR, with PLZF domain. We demonstrate that SMRT association, as with PML-RARalpha, can be released from NPM-RARalpha at pharmacological concentration of ATRA (10-6 M). Moreover, we show for the first time that the interaction between the transcriptional co-activator, RIP-140, and PML-, PLZF- or NPM-RARalpha fusion proteins can be positively stimulated by ATRA although they are less sensitive as compared with the wild-type RARalpha. Our results suggest that the dissociation of transcriptional co-repressors, SMRT/N-CoR, and recruitment of co-activators, eg RIP-140, to APL-associated fusion proteins constitute a common molecular mechanism in APL and underlie the responsiveness of the disease to RA therapy. Leukemia (2000) 14, 77–83.

Keywords
APL; ATRA; transcriptional co-repressor; transcriptional co-activator


Received 2 August 1999; Accepted 17 September 1999


© Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2000