[PDF][PDF] Apoptosis in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells after cell cycle arrest induced by pharmacological inhibition of notch signaling

HD Lewis, M Leveridge, PR Strack, CD Haldon… - Chemistry & biology, 2007 - cell.com
HD Lewis, M Leveridge, PR Strack, CD Haldon, J O'neil, H Kim, A Madin, JC Hannam…
Chemistry & biology, 2007cell.com
In this report, inhibitors of the γ-secretase enzyme have been exploited to characterize the
antiproliferative relationship between target inhibition and cellular responses in Notch-
dependent human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cell lines. Inhibition of γ-
secretase led to decreased Notch signaling, measured by endogenous NOTCH intracellular
domain (NICD) formation, and was associated with decreased cell viability. Flow cytometry
revealed that decreased cell viability resulted from a G 0/G 1 cell cycle block, which …
Summary
In this report, inhibitors of the γ-secretase enzyme have been exploited to characterize the antiproliferative relationship between target inhibition and cellular responses in Notch-dependent human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cell lines. Inhibition of γ-secretase led to decreased Notch signaling, measured by endogenous NOTCH intracellular domain (NICD) formation, and was associated with decreased cell viability. Flow cytometry revealed that decreased cell viability resulted from a G0/G1 cell cycle block, which correlated strongly to the induction of apoptosis. These effects associated with inhibitor treatment were rescued by exogenous expression of NICD and were not mirrored when a markedly less active enantiomer was used, demonstrating the γ-secretase dependency and specificity of these responses. Together, these data strengthen the rationale for using γ-secretase inhibitors therapeutically and suggest that programmed cell death may contribute to reduction of tumor burden in the clinic.
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