Retinoic acid resistance in acute promyelocytic leukemia
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Leukemia
- Vol. 16 (10) , 1940-1958
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.leu.2402719
Abstract
Primary resistance of PML-RARα-positive acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) to the induction of clinical remission (CR) by all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) is rare but markedly increases in frequency after ≥2 relapses from chemotherapy-induced CRs. Nevertheless, even in de novo cases, the primary response of ATRA-naive cases is variable by several measures, suggesting involvement of heterogeneous molecular elements. Secondary, acquired ATRA resistance occurs in most patients treated with ATRA alone and in many patients who relapse from combination ATRA chemotherapy regimens despite limited ATRA exposure. Although early studies suggested that an adaptive hypercatabolic response to pharmacological ATRA levels is the principal mechanism of ATRA resistance, recent studies suggest that molecular disturbances in APL cells have a predominant role, particularly if disease relapse occurs a few months after discontinuing ATRA therapy. This review summarizes the systemic and APL cellular elements that have been linked to clinical ATRA resistance with emphasis on identifying areas of deficient information and important topics for further investigation. Overall, the subject review strongly supports the hypothesis that, although APL is an infrequent and nearly cured disease, much can be gained by understanding the complex relationship of ATRA resistance to the progression and relapse of APL, which has important implications for other leukemias and malignancies.Keywords
This publication has 152 references indexed in Scilit:
- Orchestration of multiple arrays of signal cross-talk and combinatorial interactions for maturation and cell death: another vision of t(15;17) preleukemic blast and APL-cell maturationOncogene, 2001
- The novel co‐activator CRABPII binds to RARα and RXRα via two nuclear receptor interacting domains and does not require the AF‐2 ‘core’FEBS Letters, 2001
- Localization of the RAR interaction domain of cellular retinoic acid binding protein-IIJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- The language of covalent histone modificationsNature, 2000
- Molecular determinants of nuclear receptor-corepressor interactionGenes & Development, 1999
- In vivo analysis of the molecular pathogenesis of acute promyelocytic leukemia in the mouse and its therapeutic implicationsOncogene, 1999
- Autoinduction of Retinoic Acid Metabolism to Polar Derivatives with Decreased Biological Activity in Retinoic Acid-sensitive, but Not in Retinoic Acid-resistant Human Breast Cancer CellsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
- P450 superfamily: update on new sequences, gene mapping, accession numbers and nomenclaturePharmacogenetics, 1996
- All-trans retinoic acid followed by chemotherapy for salvage of refractory or relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemiaCancer, 1994
- 9-Cis retinoic acid stereoisomer binds and activates the nuclear receptor RXRαNature, 1992