Tumor-associated antigen preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) induces caspase-independent cell death in vitro and reduces tumorigenicity in vivo

N Tajeddine, JL Gala, M Louis, M Van Schoor… - Cancer research, 2005 - AACR
N Tajeddine, JL Gala, M Louis, M Van Schoor, B Tombal, P Gailly
Cancer research, 2005AACR
Preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) is expressed in a wide variety of
tumors, but in contrast with most other tumor associated antigens, it is also expressed in
leukemias. The physiologic role of PRAME remains elusive. Interestingly, PRAME
expression is correlated with a favorable prognosis in childhood acute leukemias. Moreover,
a high expression of PRAME seems to be predominantly found in acute leukemias carrying
a favorable prognosis. On these clinical observations, we assumed that PRAME could be …
Abstract
Preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) is expressed in a wide variety of tumors, but in contrast with most other tumor associated antigens, it is also expressed in leukemias. The physiologic role of PRAME remains elusive. Interestingly, PRAME expression is correlated with a favorable prognosis in childhood acute leukemias. Moreover, a high expression of PRAME seems to be predominantly found in acute leukemias carrying a favorable prognosis. On these clinical observations, we assumed that PRAME could be involved in the regulation of cell death or cell cycle. In this study, we show that transient overexpression of PRAME induces a caspase-independent cell death in cultured cell lines (CHO-K1 and HeLa). Cells stably transfected with PRAME also exhibit a decreased proliferation rate due, at least partially, to an elevated basal rate of cell death. Immunocytochemistry of a FLAG-tagged PRAME, in vivo imaging of an enhanced green fluorescent protein–tagged PRAME, and Western blotting after cell fractionation reveal a nuclear localization of the protein. Using a microarray-based approach, we show that KG-1 leukemic cells stably transfected with PRAME present a significant decrease of expression of the heat-shock protein Hsp27, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21, and the calcium-binding protein S100A4. The expression of these three proteins is known to inhibit apoptosis and has been associated with an unfavorable prognosis in a series of cancers. Finally, repression of PRAME expression by a short interfering RNA strategy increases tumorigenicity of K562 leukemic cells in nude mice. We suggest that all these observations might explain the favorable prognosis of the leukemias expressing high levels of PRAME.
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