Symptoms of
Leukemia Page 3

Abnormal self-renewal and
differentiation are defining features of acute myeloid
leukemia ((AML) SYMPTOMS OF
LEUKEMIA). Using models of hematopoiesis, we show
that persistent self-renewal that ignores differentiation
signals can be produced through two distinct pathways.
One pathway prevents repression of stem cell genes,
producing daughter cells that resemble parental stem
cells despite differentiation inducing lineage-specifying
factor or cytokines. Runx1 deficiency, a frequent
abnormality in (AML) SYMPTOMS OF
LEUKEMIA, demonstrates the second pathway, which
allows cytokine/lineage-specifying factor medi ated
repression of stem cell genes but impairs subsequent
activation of differentiation genes that terminate
transit-amplification, producing self-renewal in daughter
cells that do not resemble the parental stem cell. Use of
this pathway by (AML) SYMPTOMS OF LEUKEMIA cells has
therapeutic relevance: cell-fate regulation by the
chromatin-modifying protein DNMT1 is differentiation-phase
dependent. In the post lineage-commitment
differentiation-phase at which (AML) SYMPTOMS OF LEUKEMIA cell self-renewal
occurs, DNMT1 has an opposite role than in normal stem
cells. Consequently, DNMT1 depletion, using a clinically
applicable method, terminates (AML) SYMPTOMS OF LEUKEMIA
cell self-renewal but increases normal stem cell
self-renewal
.
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