Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Stem Cells
Open Access
- 1 January 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Society of Hematology in Hematology-American Society Hematology Education Program
- Vol. 2008 (1), 436-442
- https://doi.org/10.1182/asheducation-2008.1.436
Abstract
Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is typified by robust marrow and extramedullary myeloid cell production. In the absence of therapy or sometimes despite it, CML has a propensity to progress from a relatively well tolerated chronic phase to an almost uniformly fatal blast crisis phase. The discovery of the Philadelphia chromosome followed by identification of its BCR-ABL fusion gene product and the resultant constitutively active P210 BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase, prompted the unraveling of the molecular pathogenesis of CML. Ground-breaking research demonstrating that BCR-ABL was necessary and sufficient to initiate chronic phase CML provided the rationale for targeted therapy. However, regardless of greatly reduced mortality rates with BCR-ABL targeted therapy, most patients harbor quiescent CML stem cells that may be a reservoir for disease progression to blast crisis. While the hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) origin of CML was first suggested over 30 years ago, only recently have the HSC and progenitor cell–specific effects of the molecular mutations that drive CML been investigated. This has provided the impetus for investigating the genetic and epigenetic events governing HSC and progenitor cell resistance to therapy and their role in disease progression. Accumulating evidence suggests that the acquired BCR-ABL mutation initiates chronic phase CML and results in aberrant stem cell differentiation and survival. This eventually leads to the production of an expanded progenitor population that aberrantly acquires self-renewal capacity resulting in leukemia stem cell (LSC) generation and blast crisis transformation. Therapeutic recalcitrance of blast crisis CML provides the rationale for targeting the molecular pathways that drive aberrant progenitor differentiation, survival and self-renewal earlier in disease before LSC predominate.Keywords
This publication has 96 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hematopoietic stem cells and progenitors of chronic myeloid leukemia express leukemia-associated antigens: implications for the graft-versus-leukemia effect and peptide vaccine-based immunotherapyLeukemia, 2008
- Shared Principles in NF-κB SignalingCell, 2008
- Loss of β-Catenin Impairs the Renewal of Normal and CML Stem Cells In VivoCancer Cell, 2007
- The Bcl-2 apoptotic switch in cancer development and therapyOncogene, 2007
- Five-Year Follow-up of Patients Receiving Imatinib for Chronic Myeloid LeukemiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 2006
- Glioma stem cells promote radioresistance by preferential activation of the DNA damage responseNature, 2006
- Role of Bmi-1 and Ring1A in H2A Ubiquitylation and Hox Gene SilencingMolecular Cell, 2005
- Dynamics of chronic myeloid leukaemiaNature, 2005
- Involvement of PI3K/Akt pathway in cell cycle progression, apoptosis, and neoplastic transformation: a target for cancer chemotherapyLeukemia, 2003
- Human acute myeloid leukemia is organized as a hierarchy that originates from a primitive hematopoietic cellNature Medicine, 1997