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Involvement of GPx-3 in the Reciprocal Control of Redox Metabolism in the Leukemic Niche.

Christine VignonChristelle DebeissatJérôme BourgeaisNathalie GallayFarah KouziAdrienne AnginotFrédéric PicouPhilippe GuardiolaElfi DucrocqAmélie FoucaultNoémie RavaletLouis-Romée Le NailJorge DomenechMarie Christine BeneMarie-Caroline Le Bousse-KerdilèsEmmanuel GyanOlivier Herault
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
The bone marrow (BM) microenvironment plays a crucial role in the development and progression of leukemia (AML). Intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) are involved in the regulation of the biology of leukemia-initiating cells, where the antioxidant enzyme GPx-3 could be involved as a determinant of cellular self-renewal. Little is known however about the role of the microenvironment in the control of the oxidative metabolism of AML cells. In the present study, a coculture model of BM mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and AML cells (KG1a cell-line and primary BM blasts) was used to explore this metabolic pathway. MSC-contact, rather than culture with MSC-conditioned medium, decreases ROS levels and inhibits the Nrf-2 pathway through overexpression of GPx3 in AML cells. The decrease of ROS levels also inactivates p38MAPK and reduces the proliferation of AML cells. Conversely, contact with AML cells modifies MSCs in that they display an increased oxidative stress and Nrf-2 activation, together with a concomitant lowered expression of GPx-3. Altogether, these experiments suggest that a reciprocal control of oxidative metabolism is initiated by direct cell-cell contact between MSCs and AML cells. GPx-3 expression appears to play a crucial role in this cross-talk and could be involved in the regulation of leukemogenesis.
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