Published December 15, 2014 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Identifying and Validating a Combined mRNA and MicroRNA Signature in Response to Imatinib Treatment in a Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Cell Line

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Ningbo University

Description

Imatinib, a targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is the gold standard for managing chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Despite its wide application, imatinib resistance occurs in 20–30% of individuals with CML. Multiple potential biomarkers have been identified to predict imatinib response; however, the majority of them remain externally uncorroborated. In this study, we set out to systematically identify gene/microRNA (miRNA) whose expression changes are related to imatinib response. Through a Gene Expression Omnibus search, we identified two genome-wide expression datasets that contain expression changes in response to imatinib treatment in a CML cell line (K562): one for mRNA and the other for miRNA. Significantly differentially expressed transcripts/miRNAs post imatinib treatment were identified from both datasets. Three additional filtering criteria were applied 1) miRbase/miRanda predictive algorithm; 2) opposite direction of imatinib effect for genes and miRNAs; and 3) literature support. These criteria narrowed our candidate gene-miRNA to a single pair: IL8 and miR-493-5p. Using PCR we confirmed the significant up-regulation and down-regulation of miR-493-5p and IL8 by imatinib treatment, respectively in K562 cells. In addition, IL8 expression was significantly down-regulated in K562 cells 24 hours after miR-493-5p mimic transfection (p = 0.002). Furthermore, we demonstrated significant cellular growth inhibition after IL8 inhibition through either gene silencing or by over-expression of miR-493-5p (p = 0.0005 and p = 0.001 respectively). The IL8 inhibition also further sensitized K562 cells to imatinib cytotoxicity (p<0.0001). Our study combined expression changes in transcriptome and miRNA after imatinib exposure to identify a potential gene-miRNA pair that is a critical target in imatinib response. Experimental validation supports the relationships between IL8 and miR-493-5p and between this gene-miRNA pair and imatinib sensitivity in a CML cell line. Our data suggests integrative analysis of multiple omic level data may provide new insight into biomarker discovery as well as mechanisms of imatinib resistance.

Data availability

The authors confirm that all data underlying the findings are fully available without restriction. All relevant data are within the paper.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0115003
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:8831

Funding

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
5R25HL096383-05
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
UO1GM61393
Natural Science Foundation of Ningbo City, China
2014A610235
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
K08GM089941
National Cancer Institute
R21 CA139278
University of Chicago
Cancer Center Support Grant
University of Chicago
Breast Cancer SPORE Career Development Award
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
UL1RR024999

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Medicine