Normal bone marrow signal-transduction profiles: a requisite for enhanced detection of signaling dysregulations in AML.

TitleNormal bone marrow signal-transduction profiles: a requisite for enhanced detection of signaling dysregulations in AML.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsMarvin J, Swaminathan S, Kraker G, Chadburn A, Jacobberger J, Goolsby C
JournalBlood
Volume117
Issue15
Paginatione120-30
Date Published2011 Apr 14
ISSN1528-0020
KeywordsBone Marrow, Extracellular Signal-Regulated MAP Kinases, Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Interleukin-3, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute, Membrane Proteins, Phosphoproteins, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt, Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinases, 90-kDa, Signal Transduction, STAT3 Transcription Factor, STAT5 Transcription Factor, Stem Cell Factor
Abstract

Molecular and cytogenetic alterations are involved in virtually every facet of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), including dysregulation of major signal-transduction pathways. The present study examines 5 phosphoproteins (pErk, pAkt, pS6, pStat3, and pStat5) in response to 5 cytokine/growth factors (stem cell factor [SCF], Flt-3/Flk-2 ligand [FL], granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor [GM-CSF], interleukin-3 [IL-3], and granulocyte-CSF [G-CSF]) within 7 immunophenotypically defined populations, spanning progenitor to mature myeloid/myelomonocytic cells in normal bone marrows with further comparison to AML samples. The normal cohort showed pathway-specific responses related to lineage, maturation, and stimulus. Heterogeneous-signaling responses were seen in homogeneous immunophenotypic subsets emphasizing the additive information of signaling. These profiles provided a critical baseline for detection of dysregulated signaling in AML falling into 4 broad categories, viz lack of response, increased activation, altered constitutive expression, and dysregulated response kinetics, easily identified in 10 of 12 AMLs. These studies clearly show robust and reproducible flow cytometry phosphoprotein analyses capable of detecting abnormal signal-transduction responses in AML potentially contributing to definitive reliable identification of abnormal cells. As functional correlates of underlying genetic abnormalities, signal-transduction abnormalities may provide more stable indicators of abnormal cells than immunophenotyping which frequently changes after therapy and disease recurrence.

DOI10.1182/blood-2010-10-316026
Alternate JournalBlood
PubMed ID21233314
Related Faculty: 
Amy Chadburn, M.D.

Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 1300 York Avenue New York, NY 10065 Phone: (212) 746-6464
Surgical Pathology: (212) 746-2700