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Review
. 2017;64(1):1-10.
doi: 10.18388/abp.2016_1396. Epub 2016 Dec 1.

Reactive oxygen species in BCR-ABL1-expressing cells - relevance to chronic myeloid leukemia

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Free article
Review

Reactive oxygen species in BCR-ABL1-expressing cells - relevance to chronic myeloid leukemia

Joanna Antoszewska-Smith et al. Acta Biochim Pol. 2017.
Free article

Abstract

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) results from the t(9;22) reciprocal chromosomal translocation producing the BCR-ABL1 gene, conferring growth and proliferation advantages in the CML cells. CML progresses from chronic, often syndrome-free, to blast phase, fatal if not treated. Although the involvement of BCR-ABL1 in some signaling pathways is considered as the cause of CML, the mechanisms resulting in its progression are not completely known. However, BCR-ABL1 stimulates the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which levels increase with CML progression and induce BCR-ABL1 self-mutagenesis. Introducing imatinib and other tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) to CML therapy radically improved its outcome, but TKIs-resistance became an emerging problem. TKI resistance can be associated with even higher ROS production than in TKI-sensitive cells. Therefore, ROS-induced self-mutagenesis of BCR-ABL1 can be crucial for CML progression and TKI resistance and in this way should be taken into account in therapeutic strategies. As a continuous production of ROS by BCR-ABL1 would lead to its self-destruction and death of CML cells, there must be mechanisms controlling this phenomenon. These can be dependent on DNA repair, which is modulated by BCR-ABL1 and can be different in CML stem and progenitor cells. Altogether, the mechanisms of the involvement of BCR-ABL1 in ROS signaling can be engaged in CML progression and TKI-resistance and warrant further study.

Keywords: DNA damage; DNA repair; cancer stem cells; chronic myeloid leukemia; imatinib resistance; reactive oxygen species.

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