Down syndrome children with acute megakaryocytic leukemia (AMkL) have higher cure rates than non-Down syndrome acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients treated with cytosine arabinoside (ara-C). Megakaryoblasts from Down syndrome AML patients are more sensitive in vitro to ara-C than cells from non-Down syndrome AML patients. Somatic mutations in the GATA1 transcription factor have been detected exclusively and almost uniformly in Down syndrome AMkL patients, suggesting a potential linkage to the chemotherapy sensitivity of Down syndrome megakaryoblasts. Stable transfection of wild-type GATA1 cDNA into the Down syndrome AMkL cell line CMK resulted in decreased (8- to 17-fold) ara-C sensitivity and a threefold-lower generation of the active ara-C metabolite ara-CTP compared with that for mock-transfected CMK cells. High intracellular levels of uridine arabinoside (ara-U) (an inactive ara-C catabolite generated by cytidine deaminase) and cytidine deaminase transcripts were detected in GATA1-transfected CMK sublines, whereas no ara-U was detected in mock-transfected cells. Cytidine deaminase transcripts were a median 5.1-fold (P = .002) lower in Down syndrome megakaryoblasts (n = 16) than in blast cells from non-Down syndrome patients (n = 56). These results suggest that GATA1 transcriptionally upregulates cytidine deaminase and that the presence or absence of GATA1 mutations in AML blasts likely confers differences in ara-C sensitivities due to effects on cytidine deaminase gene expression, which, in turn, contributes to the high cure rate of Down syndrome AMkL patients.
Deoxycytidine kinase (EC 2.7.1.74, dCK) is central to drug activity of anticancer and antiviral agents such as cytosine arabinoside (araC) and gemcitabine. HepG2 hepatocellular carcinoma cells were used to study the transcriptional regulation of dCK. 5-Deletion and sitedirected mutagenesis of the dCK upstream region (positions ؊464 to ؊27) confirmed the importance of two GC-boxes (positions ؊317 to ؊309 and ؊213 to ؊206) and two E-boxes (positions ؊302 to ؊297 and ؊278 to ؊273). In vitro electromobility shift assays with HepG2 nuclear extracts and in vivo chromatin immunoprecipitation assays with HepG2 chromatin extracts confirmed the presence of bound Sp1/Sp3 and USF1/2. Co-transfections in HepG2 cells showed that USF1 and USF2a stimulated and Sp1 repressed promoter activity from a dCK-luciferase reporter gene construct. In Sp-and USF-null Drosophila Mel-2 cells, both Sp1 and USF1 stimulated dCK promoter activity in a dose-dependent manner, however, both Sp3 and USF2a were effectively inert. Combined Sp1 and USF1 showed additive transactivation at lower concentrations of Sp1. Sp1 was inhibitory at higher levels. Stimulation by combined USF1/USF2a with Sp1 was similar to that for USF1 alone with Sp1, whereas transactivation by Sp1 and USF2a without USF1 was synergistic. Physical interactions between USF and Sp proteins were confirmed by immunoprecipitations with Sp-and USF-specific antibodies. Domain mapping of USF1 and USF2a localized the functional interactions between USF and Sp proteins to the DNA binding domain of USF. Identifying the physical and functional interactions between Sp and USF proteins may lead to a better understanding of the basis for differential expression of the dCK gene in tumor cells and may foster strategies for up-regulating dCK gene expression and improving chemotherapy with araC and gemcitabine.
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