Person:

Ebralidze, Alexander

Loading...
Profile Picture

Email Address

AA Acceptance Date

Birth Date

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Job Title

Last Name

Ebralidze

First Name

Alexander

Name

Ebralidze, Alexander

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Publication

    Identification of a myeloid committed progenitor as the cancer-initiating cell in acute promyelocytic leukemia

    (American Society of Hematology, 2009) Guibal, F. C.; Alberich-Jorda, M.; Hirai, H.; Ebralidze, Alexander; Levantini, Elena; Di Ruscio, A.; Zhang, Pu; Santana-Lemos, B. A.; Neuberg, Donna; Wagers, Amy; Rego, E. M.; Tenen, Daniel

    Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is characterized by a block in differentiation and accumulation of promyelocytes in the bone marrow and blood. The majority of APL patients harbor the t(15:17) translocation leading to expression of the fusion protein promyelocytic-retinoic acid receptor . Treatment with retinoic acid leads to degradation of promyelocyticretinoic acid receptor protein and disappearance of leukemic cells; however, 30% of APL patients relapse after treatment. One potential mechanism for relapse is the persistence of cancer “stem” cells in hematopoietic organs after treatment. Using a novel sorting strategy we developed to isolate murine myeloid cells at distinct stages of differentiation, we identified a population of committed myeloid cells (CD34, c-kit, FcRIII/II, Gr1int) that accumulates in the spleen and bone marrow in a murine model of APL. We observed that these cells are capable of efficiently generating leukemia in recipient mice, demonstrating that this population represents the APL cancer–initiating cell. These cells down-regulate the transcription factor CCAAT/enhancer binding protein (C/EBP) possibly through a methylationdependent mechanism, indicating that C/EBP deregulation contributes to transformation of APL cancer–initiating cells. Our findings provide further understanding of the biology of APL by demonstrating that a committed transformed progenitor can initiate and propagate the disease.