Overexpression of nucleolin in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells induces stabilization of bcl2 mRNA

Yoko Otake(Medical University of South Carolina), Sridharan Soundararajan, Tapas K. Sengupta, Ebenezer A. Kio(Medical University of South Carolina), James C. Smith(Medical University of South Carolina), Mauricio Pineda‐Roman(Medical University of South Carolina), Robert K. Stuart(Medical University of South Carolina), Eleanor K. Spicer, Daniel Fernandes
Blood
December 19, 2006
Cited by 233Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by the accumulation of clonal B cells that are resistant to apoptosis as a result of bcl2 oncogene overexpression. Studies were done to determine the mechanism for the up-regulation of bcl-2 protein observed in CD19+ CLL cells compared with CD19+ B cells from healthy volunteers. The 11-fold higher level of bcl-2 protein in CLL cells was positively correlated with a 26-fold elevation in the cytosolic level of nucleolin, a bcl2 mRNA-stabilizing protein. Measurements of the bcl2 heterogeneous nuclear/bcl2 mRNA (hnRNA)/mRNA ratios and the rates of bcl2 mRNA decay in cell extracts indicated that the 3-fold higher steady-state level of bcl2 mRNA in CLL cells was the result of increased bcl2 mRNA stability. Nucleolin was present throughout the nucleus and cytoplasm of CLL cells, whereas in normal B cells nucleolin was only detected in the nucleus. The addition of recombinant human nucleolin to extracts of normal B cells markedly slowed the rate of bcl2 mRNA decay. SiRNA knockdown of nucleolin in MCF-7 cells resulted in decreased levels of bcl2mRNA and protein but no change in beta-actin. These results indicate that bcl-2 overexpression in CLL cells is related to stabilization of bcl2 mRNA by nucleolin.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis