Therapy-induced selective loss of leukemia-initiating activity in murine adult T cell leukemia

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Abstract

Chronic HTLV-I (human T cell lymphotropic virus type I) infection may cause adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL), a disease with dismal long-term prognosis. The HTLV-I transactivator, Tax, initiates ATL in transgenic mice. In this study, we demonstrate that an As2O3 and IFN-α combination, known to trigger Tax proteolysis, cures Tax-driven ATL in mice. Unexpectedly, this combination therapy abrogated initial leukemia engraftment into secondary recipients, whereas the primary tumor bulk still grew in the primary hosts, only to ultimately abate later on. This loss of initial transplantability required proteasome function. A similar regimen recently yielded unprecedented disease control in human ATL. Our demonstration that this drug combination targeting Tax stability abrogates tumor cell immortality but not short-term growth may foretell a favorable long-term efficiency of this regimen in patients. © 2010 El Hajj et al.

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El Hajj, H., El-Sabban, M., Hasegawa, H., Zaatari, G., Ablain, J., Saab, S. T., … Bazarbachi, A. (2010). Therapy-induced selective loss of leukemia-initiating activity in murine adult T cell leukemia. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 207(13), 2785–2792. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20101095

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