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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2000, p. 1179-1186, Vol. 20, No. 4
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Survival Function of the Bcr-Abl Oncogene Is
Mediated by Bad-Dependent and -Independent Pathways: Roles for
Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase and Raf
Mehran S.
Neshat,1,2
Arthur B.
Raitano,1
Hong-Gang
Wang,3
John C.
Reed,3 and
Charles L.
Sawyers1,2,*
Departments of
Medicine1 and Molecular Biology
Institute,2 University of California, Los
Angeles, and Program on Apoptosis and Cell Death Research,
Burnham Institute, La Jolla,3 California
Received 25 October 1999/Accepted 10 November 1999
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ABSTRACT |
The Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase constitutively activates cytokine
signal transduction pathways that stimulate growth and prevent apoptosis in hematopoietic cells. The antiapoptotic action of interleukin-3 (IL-3) has been linked to a signaling pathway which inactivates the proapoptotic protein Bad by phosphorylation through kinases such as Akt and Raf. Here we report also that expression of
Bcr-Abl leads to phosphorylation of Bad in hematopoietic cells. Bad
phosphorylation induced by Bcr-Abl is kinase dependent, requires phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase), and mitochondrial targeting
of Raf, and occurs independently of Erk. The ability of Bcr-Abl to
confer cytokine-independent survival to hematopoietic cells was
compromised by inhibitors of PI3-kinase, as well as by a dominant
negative form of Raf targeted to the mitochondria. Furthermore, when
the capacity of Bcr-Abl to phosphorylate Bad was completely blocked by
dominant negative Raf, a subpopulation of cells remained viable,
providing evidence for Bad-independent survival pathways. This
alternative survival pathway remained PI3-kinase dependent. Finally,
Bcr-Abl, but not IL-3, inhibited the proapoptotic activity of
overexpressed Bad. We conclude that the antiapoptotic function of
Bcr-Abl is mediated through pathways involving PI3-kinase and Raf and
that survival can occur in the absence of Bad phosphorylation.
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INTRODUCTION |
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)
is a hematopoietic disorder which shows features of enhanced myeloid
cell survival early during the chronic phase and uncontrolled
mitogenesis during late-stage blast crisis. The initiating event in CML
is the Philadelphia chromosome translocation which creates a
constitutively active cytoplasmic thymidine kinase (TK) encoded by the
Bcr-Abl fusion gene (21). Bcr-Abl induces mitogenesis in
fibroblast and hematopoietic cell transformation models (reviewed in
reference 31) and protects cells from apoptosis
induced by numerous stimuli including cytokine withdrawal, DNA damage,
and Fas activation (2, 3, 12, 24-26). Similar to studies of
cytokine and TK receptors, mutational analysis of Bcr-Abl suggests that
signals responsible for protection from apoptosis may be separable from
those responsible for transformation (7). Bcr-Abl activates
Ras (23), Raf (27, 41), Myc (6, 35),
Stat (5, 18, 38), Jun (32), phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) (39, 40), and Akt (39) but
not Erk (19). Of these, Ras (36), Raf
(41), Myc (35), PI3-kinase (39, 40),
Akt (39), and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (11) and its substrate Jun (32) are critical for transforming
activity. The mechanism for the antiapoptotic effect of Bcr-Abl is less clear, and the connections between Bcr-Abl and the apoptosis machinery are just beginning to be appreciated.
Mitochondria are known to play a central role in the control of
apoptosis (reviewed in reference 15a); therefore,
there has been intense interest in defining the pathways responsible
for transmitting survival-promoting signals from cell surface receptors to the mitochondria. One such pathway leads to inactivation of the
proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bad through activation of kinases
such as Akt (9, 10) or Raf (43, 46).
Nonphosphorylated Bad binds to Bcl-XL, inhibits its
antiapoptotic function, and promotes cell death (44).
Survival signals mediated by cytokines such as interleukin-3 (IL-3),
nerve growth factor (NGF), or insulin-like growth factor 1 promote
phosphorylation of Bad through a PI3-kinase/Akt-dependent pathway
(9, 10). The consequence of Bad phosphorylation on two
residues (Ser112 and Ser136) is inhibition of binding to
Bcl-XL and sequestration in the cytosol by the
phosphoserine-interacting protein 14-3-3 (46). Bad
phosphorylation at serine 136 is mediated by Akt. While the identities
of kinases responsible for phosphorylation of Bad at other residues
remain elusive, recent evidence strongly point to the role of protein
kinase A (PKA) for phosphorylation of Bad at residue 112 (16).
The PI3-kinase/Akt/Bad pathway represents a well-established and
important bridge between the extracellular survival signal and
modulators of mitochondrially initiated apoptosis. However, evidence
exists that the survival function of cytokines cannot be fully
explained by this single mechanism. For example, IL-3 and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) activate
similar signaling pathways in hematopoietic cells through a common
subunit, yet GM-CSF alone can prolong survival in the absence of
PI3-kinase or PKB activity, with Bad phosphorylation status remaining
unperturbed (37). Similar results have been observed in
primary neurons, where NGF can maintain survival in the absence of
PI3-kinase activity (29). In addition, activation of Akt
does not necessarily result in phosphorylation of Bad. The cytokine
IL-4 clearly activates the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway without induction of
Bad phosphorylation (37). These observations collectively
point to the importance of Akt-independent as well as Bad-independent
survival pathways in response to cytokines.
Because Bcr-Abl activates many of the same signaling pathways as
cytokines such as IL-3 and GM-CSF, we investigated the role of Bad
phosphorylation as a mediator of the Bcr-Abl survival function. We find
that Bad is phosphorylated in cells expressing Bcr-Abl in a
kinase-dependent fashion. This phosphorylation requires PI3-kinase, Ras, and Raf. Similarly, the ability of Bcr-Abl to promote survival of
hematopoietic cells in the absence of IL-3 requires PI3-kinase and
mitochondrial targeting of Raf. Interestingly, some Bcr-Abl-expressing hematopoietic cells expressing dominant negative mitochondrion-targeted Raf can survive despite complete inhibition of Bad phosphorylation, revealing a Bad-independent survival pathway. Finally, we have observed
that Bcr-Abl counteracts the proapoptotic function of Bad by allowing
stable overexpression of Bad in hematopoietic cells whereas IL-3 does
not. These findings collectively establish novel mechanisms for the
antiapoptotic function of Bcr-Abl in hematopoietic cells via
Bad-dependent as well as Bad-independent pathways.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cells and plasmids.
293 human embryonic kidney cells were
grown in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium supplemented with 10% calf
serum (HyClone), penicillin, streptomycin, and glutamine. FL5.12
IL-3-dependent hematopoietic cells (46) were grown in RPMI
medium with 10% fetal bovine serum (Omega Scientific),
penicillin-streptomycin, glutamine, and 10% WEHI-3 supernatant as a
source of IL-3. For Bad phosphorylation studies, FL5.12 cells were
infected with retrovirus expressing Flag-Bad or hemagglutinin (HA)
epitope-tagged Bad and selected in puromycin or G418. The retroviral
expression vectors pSR
MSV Bcr-Abl tkNeo (p185 form) and pSR
RasN17 tkNeo have been previously described (36). pSR
MSV
DN Erk1 tkNeo was constructed by subcloning a NotI fragment
containing the HA epitope-tagged kinase-inactive mutant of Erk1 (K72R)
from pCEP4 (13) into pSR
MSVtkNeo. pCDNA3 DN M-Raf-1 and
pCDNA3 HA-Bad have been previously described (43). DN
M-Raf-1 (a kinase-inactive dominant negative mutant of Raf-1 fused with
the transmembrane domain from the yeast outer mitochondrial membrane
protein Mas70) was subcloned into pSR
MSVtkNeo by PCR. The DN Akt
plasmid has been described previously (42).
Bad phosphorylation and CAT assays.
FL5.12 cells expressing
Bad and/or Bcr-Abl were cultured for 2 h in the absence of IL-3
and then labeled with [32P]orthophosphate for 2 more h.
IL-3 was added for 15 min. Bad was immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag or
anti-HA antibody and examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) using autoradiography or immunoblot
analysis. In some experiments, wortmannin or LY294002 diluted in
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was added 30 min prior to phosphate labeling
to a final concentration of 0 (DMSO alone), 0.1, or 1.0 µM. 293 cells
(70% confluent in 10-cm-diameter dishes) were transfected overnight with pCDNA3 HA-Bad expression plasmid with or without Bcr-Abl and/or
the various dominant negative expression plasmids, using the calcium
phosphate method. Cells were starved of serum for 24 h prior to
harvesting at 48 h. Cell lysates were prepared in a buffer
containing 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 1% Triton X-100, 0.5% SDS, 100 µg
of phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 1 mM NaVO4, 25 mM
-glycerophosphate, and 10 mM NaF.
Lysates were adjusted to 0.05% SDS and centrifuged at 25,000 × g to pellet DNA and nonsolubilized debris. Cell lysates were
separated by SDS-PAGE (10% gel), and HA-Bad phosphorylation was
monitored by Western blotting as previously described (43) with monoclonal antibody 12CA5 (Boehringer). Chloramphenicol
acetyltransferase (CAT) assays were carried out as previously described
(33), using the Ras-responsive reporter construct pB4X-CAT
(28) and pEXV-Raf-CAAX expression plasmid (30) as
an activator. Pan-Bad antibody was purchased from Santa Cruz
Biotechnology, and phosphospecific Bad antibody was kindly provided by
Michael Greenberg (Children's Hospital, Boston, Mass.).
Biological assays.
FL5.12 cells were washed three times and
plated in medium without IL-3 for all IL-3 withdrawal experiments. The
number of viable cells was measured by trypan blue exclusion, and
apoptosis was documented by propidium iodide staining and
fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. For wortmannin or
LY294002 experiments, concentrations of 0 (DMSO alone), 0.1, and 1.0 µM were used. FL5.12 cells stably expressing DN M-Raf-1 were derived
by retroviral infection and selection in the antibiotic G418 or
puromycin. Expression of DN M-Raf-1 was confirmed with anti-C-terminal
Raf-1 antibody (Santa Cruz). Bcr-Abl expression was measured using the
anti-Abl monoclonal antibody pex5 (15). FL5.12 cell lines
were infected with Bcr-Abl retrovirus for 2 days, washed in serum-free
medium, and then plated at 200 cells/well into 96-well plates in
complete medium with and without IL-3. Individual wells were examined
daily by light microscopy and scored negative (
; <200 cells),
positive (+; 200 to 1,000 cells), or strongly positive (++; >1,000
cells) based on the number of viable cells. The accuracy of this
scoring system was validated by performing cell counts on randomly
selected wells in a blinded fashion.
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RESULTS |
Bad is constitutively phosphorylated in hematopoietic cells
expressing Bcr-Abl in the presence or absence of IL-3.
Since
Bcr-Abl can replace the IL-3 requirement in a number of
cytokine-dependent hematopoietic cell lines, we asked if Bcr-Abl activated a pathway leading to Bad phosphorylation in FL5.12 cells, an
IL-3 dependent pre-B hematopoietic cell used previously to characterize
the IL-3-induced phosphorylation of Bad (10, 46). Parental
FL5.12 cells or FL5.12 cells expressing Bcr-Abl were starved of IL-3
for 2 h and then cultured in
[32P]orthophosphate-containing medium in the presence or
absence of IL-3, and the phosphorylation state of transfected Bad was examined by autoradiography following immunoprecipitation. Immunoblot analysis confirmed equivalent levels of immunoprecipitated Bad protein
(Fig. 1A, bottom panel). In parental
cells, Bad phosphorylation was induced by exposure to IL-3 (Fig. 1A),
consistent with previous reports (10, 46). In
Bcr-Abl-expressing cells, Bad remained phosphorylated even in the
absence of IL-3 (Fig. 1A). These results demonstrate that Bad is
constitutively phosphorylated in hematopoietic cells expressing
Bcr-Abl.

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FIG. 1.
Bad is constitutively phosphorylated in hematopoietic
cells expressing Bcr-Abl in the presence or absence of IL-3. (A) FL5.12
cells infected with retrovirus expressing Bcr-Abl or the parental
vector (Neo) were superinfected with retrovirus expressing Flag-Bad and
selected in puromycin. Expression of Bad and Bcr-Abl was confirmed by
immunoblotting (data not shown) prior to phosphate labeling. Cells were
starved of serum and IL-3 in phosphate-free medium for 2 h and
then incubated with [32P]orthophosphate for 2 h
before addition of IL-3 or control. After 15 min, cells were lysed and
Bad was immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag antibody. Autoradiography
(top) and Bad immunoblot (bottom) of the immunoprecipitates are shown
after SDS-PAGE. (B) 293 cells were cotransfected with plasmids
expressing HA-Bad and either Neo (lane 1), wild-type Bcr-Abl (lane 2),
or kinase-inactive Bcr-Abl (lane 3). Western blots of lysates were
analyzed with antibody CA125 against HA or antibody Pex5 against
Bcr-Abl.
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We confirmed these findings in a transient transfection model.
Phosphorylated Bad migrates more slowly in SDS-polyacrylamide gels and
is easily detected as a band shift in Western blots (43, 46). 293 cells were cotransfected with plasmids expressing HA-Bad and either Bcr-Abl or a control vector, and lysates were analyzed after
48 h by Western blotting using an anti-HA antibody. In control cells transfected with HA-Bad alone, two bands representing
phosphorylated (upper band) and unphosphorylated (lower band) forms are
visible (Fig. 1b, lane 1). Consistent with the effects observed in
hematopoietic cells, Bcr-Abl significantly increased the level of
hyperphosphorylated Bad (Fig. 1B, lane 2). This effect requires the TK
activity of Bcr-Abl since a kinase-inactive mutant of Bcr-Abl
(15) failed to induce phosphorylation of Bad despite levels
of protein expression comparable to those for wild-type Bcr-Abl (Fig.
1B, lane 3). These results confirm and extend the finding in
hematopoietic cells that Bcr-Abl activates a pathway leading to Bad phosphorylation.
Bcr-Abl phosphorylation of Bad on serine 136 is PI3-kinase and Akt
dependent.
The serine/threonine kinase Akt is known to
phosphorylate Bad on serine 136 through a signaling pathway involving
PI3-kinase (9, 10). Since Bcr-Abl can activate a
PI3-kinase/Akt pathway (39), we tested whether Bad is
phosphorylated on serine 136, using a phosphospecific antibody for this
residue in hematopoietic cells expressing Bcr-Abl (9). In
parental FL5.12 cells starved of IL-3 for 3 h, endogenous Bad
protein was visualized with an antiserum that detects phosphorylated or
unphosphorylated protein (anti-Bad) (Fig.
2A, bottom). Using the phosphospecific
anti-Bad 136 antiserum, Bad could not be detected after IL-3
withdrawal, indicating that Bad was no longer phosphorylated on serine
136 (Fig. 2A, lane 1). However, in cells expressing Bcr-Abl, Bad was detected with both antisera, indicating constitutive phosphorylation of
Bad at serine 136 (Fig. 2A, lane 2).

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FIG. 2.
Bcr-Abl-mediated Bad phosphorylation occurs on Ser136 in
a PI3-kinase-dependent manner. (A) Parental or Bcr-Abl-expressing
FL5.12 cells were starved of IL-3 for 3 h. Bad protein was
examined in whole-cell lysates by immunoblotting using a
phosphospecific antibody directed against Ser136 (top) or a pan-Bad
antibody that recognizes phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated protein
(bottom). (B) FL5.12 cells expressing Bcr-Abl and HA-Bad growing in the
absence of IL-3 were labeled with [32P]orthophosphate
after incubation with the PI3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin (left) or
LY294002 (LY; right). HA-Bad was immunoprecipitated and analyzed by
autoradiography (top) or immunoblotting with HA antibody (bottom). (C)
293 cells were cotransfected with plasmids expressing Bcr-Abl, HA-Bad,
and HA-DN Akt. HA-labeled proteins were immunoprecipitated after
[32P]orthophosphate labeling for 2 h and analyzed by
autoradiography (top) or immunoblotting with anti-HA antibody
(bottom).
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We investigated the pathway which leads to phosphorylation of Bad at
Ser136 in Bcr-Abl-expressing FL5.12 cells and in transient transfection
assays of 293 cells. Increasing doses of the PI3-kinase inhibitor
LY294002 or wortmannin caused a 10-fold reduction in the level of Bad
phosphorylation in Bcr-Abl-expressing hematopoietic cells (Fig. 2B) and
in 293 cells cotransfected with Bcr-Abl and Bad (data not shown). To
directly assess the role of the serine/threonine kinase Akt, we also
overexpressed a dominant negative mutant (Akt R197M) along with Bcr-Abl
and Bad. It should be noted that this kinase-inactive mutant of Akt
becomes phosphorylated in response to PI3-kinase activation since it
retains residues Ser473 and Thr308. As expected, the PI3-kinase pathway
was active in these cells, as measured by the level of 32P
incorporation in the Akt R197M mutant immunoprecipitated with an HA
antibody (Fig. 2C). We find that Bcr-Abl-mediated Bad phosphorylation was inhibited by expression of DN Akt. We conclude that Bad is phosphorylated in Bcr-Abl-expressing cells through the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway at residue 136. These results confirm and extend previous reports implicating the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway in Bcr-Abl function (39).
Bcr-Abl-mediated Bad phosphorylation is Raf and Ras dependent but
Erk independent.
We examined the role of the Ras/Raf/Erk signal
transduction pathway in the phosphorylation signal from Bcr-Abl to Bad
since transformation by Bcr-Abl is dependent on activation of the Ras pathway (15, 28, 36). Coexpression of a dominant negative mutant of Ras diminished the effect of Bcr-Abl on Bad phosphorylation (Fig. 3A, lane 2). To determine whether
mitochondrial targeting of Raf is required for Bcr-Abl-mediated
phosphorylation of Bad, cells were cotransfected with DN M-Raf-1. This
mutant localizes to mitochondria, blocks endogenous Raf activity at the
mitochondrial surface, and interferes with the antiapoptotic activity
of IL-3 (43). DN M-Raf-1 completely blocked the effect of
Bcr-Abl on Bad phosphorylation (Fig. 3A, lane 3), whereas a
kinase-inactive dominant negative mutant of Erk2 (DN Erk)
(13) did not (Fig. 3A, lane 4). DN Erk did, however, inhibit
the activation of an Erk-dependent reporter gene by membrane-targeted
Raf-CAAX (Fig. 3B). These results are consistent with Bcr-Abl
activating a Ras-dependent, Raf-dependent, Erk-independent
mitochondrial pathway leading to Bad phosphorylation.

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FIG. 3.
Bcr-Abl induces the phosphorylation of the Bcl-2 family
member BAD in a Ras- and Raf-dependent but Erk-independent manner. (A)
293 cells were cotransfected with HA-Bad plus Bcr-Abl and Neo (lane 1),
DN Ras (lane 2), DN M-Raf-1 (lane 3), or DN Erk (lane 4). Western blots
of lysates were analyzed with anti-HA antibody CA125 or anti-Bcr-Abl
antibody Pex5. (B) 293 cells were transfected with pB4XCAT reporter
plasmid and either Neo (lane 1), DN Erk (lane 2), Raf-Caax (lane 3), or
Raf-Caax plus DN Erk (lane 4), and CAT activity was measured in lysates
after 48 h. Percent acetylation is noted at the bottom.
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Inhibition of Bad phosphorylation impairs the survival function of
Bcr-Abl in hematopoietic cells.
It has previously been established
that Bcr-Abl protects hematopoietic cells from apoptosis due to
cytokine withdrawal (12) and induces cytokine-independent
growth (8, 17). To further examine the importance of Bad
phosphorylation in Bcr-Abl survival function, FL5.12 cells were
monitored for their survival and growth upon acute infection with a
retroviral vector harboring DN M-Raf-1. The biological effect of
Bcr-Abl was measured in a single-step quantitative assay by plating
Bcr-Abl-infected cells into 96-well tissue culture plates in the
absence of IL-3. Each well was examined daily by light microscopy and
scored as negative, positive, or strongly positive (see Materials and
Methods) for 10 consecutive days. Of note, DN M-Raf-1 did not affect
the survival or growth of FL5.12 cells in the presence of IL-3 (Fig.
4A), indicating that expression of this
gene is not generally toxic to cells. In the absence of Bcr-Abl, no
viable cells were observed after 48 h postplating, whereas 100%
of wells containing parental FL5.12 cells infected with Bcr-Abl scored
strongly positive by day 6 (Fig. 4A). In contrast, coinfection of DN
M-Raf-1 blocked the survival function of Bcr-Abl in close to 50% of
the wells (Fig. 4A, column 1). In the remaining half, the number of
viable cells was clearly decreased.

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FIG. 4.
Bcr-Abl confers a survival signal to FL5.12 cells that
requires mitochondrial targeting of Raf. Populations of FL5.12 cells
expressing Neo or DN M-Raf-1 were infected with Bcr-Abl or control
retrovirus (Neo) for 48 h and plated at 200 cells/well in
microtiter plates in the presence or absence of IL-3. Wells were
examined daily by light microscopy and scored as described in Materials
and Methods. (A) Results from three separate experiments using
independently derived FL5.12 populations. (B) Number of wells scoring
strongly positive (++) versus time in days for FL5.12 cells expressing
Neo or DN M-Raf-1 after infection with Bcr-Abl or control retrovirus.
(C) Lysates of parental or FL5.12/DN M-Raf-1 cells, analyzed by Western
blotting 48 h after infection with Neo or Bcr-Abl retrovirus for
expression of Bcr-Abl or DN M-Raf-1.
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To further examine this population, stable lines were derived from
FL5.12 cells coexpressing DN M-Raf-1 and Bcr-Abl. Growth of these cells
was shown to be five- to sevenfold slower than that of cells solely
expressing Bcr-Abl (Fig. 5A).
Furthermore, no increased rate of apoptosis was detected in this
subpopulation, as judged by trypan blue staining (data not shown).
Therefore, overexpression of DN M-Raf-1 impaired the growth but not the
survival of this subpopulation of Bcr-Abl-expressing cells.
Interestingly, within limits of detection of our assay, no
phosphorylated Bad was detected in the six independent stable lines
expressing Bcr-Abl and DN M-Raf-1 (Fig. 5B and data not shown). This
result suggests the existence of a survival pathway in hematopoietic
cells that can bypass the need to phosphorylate and deactivate Bad.

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FIG. 5.
A subpopulation of hematopoietic cells coexpressing
Bcr-Abl and DN M-Raf-1 remain viable in the absence of Bad
phosphorylation. Stable FL5.12 hematopoietic cell lines were derived
from Bcr-Abl-expressing cells after retroviral infection with DN M
Raf-1. Six of these lines were characterized in biological and
biochemical assays. (A) Growth of Bcr-Abl/DN M-Raf-1-expressing
sublines was monitored by trypan blue dye exclusion, and the number of
viable cells is shown for the duration of the experiment. (B) Levels of
phosphorylated and total Bad protein were examined by
[32P]orthophosphate labeling followed by
immunoprecipitation with anti-Bad antibody in the six stable lines
expressing Bcr-Abl and DN M-Raf-1. Results from three representative
lines with different levels of Bcr-Abl expression (top panels) and
expression of DN M-Raf-1 and Bcr-Abl confirmed in the same whole-cell
lysates (bottom panels) are shown.
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Inhibition of PI3-kinase interferes with the survival function of
Bcr-Abl.
To determine the effects of the PI3-kinase/Akt pathway on
growth and survival in the FL5.12 hematopoietic model, we measured the
viability of parental or Bcr-Abl-expressing cells starved of IL-3 in
the presence of various concentrations of LY294002 or wortmannin. As
expected, about 50% of parental cells were dead within 24 h of
IL-3 withdrawal (Fig. 6A).
Bcr-Abl-expressing FL5.12 cells proliferated in the absence of IL-3,
and this growth was inhibited by LY294002 (Fig. 6B) and wortmannin
(data not shown). LY294002 similarly blocked the growth of stable lines
escaping the inhibitory effect of DN M-Raf-1 on Bcr-Abl (Fig. 6C). We
conclude that Bcr-Abl-induced survival functions are PI3-kinase
dependent and include Bad-dependent as well as Bad-independent
pathways.

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FIG. 6.
The PI3-kinase inhibitor LY294002 impairs the
cytokine-independent growth Bcr-Abl-expressing hematopoietic cells.
Parental (A), Bcr-Abl-expressing (B), or Bcr-Abl/DN M-Raf-1-expressing
(C) FL5.12 cells were cultured with the PI3-kinase inhibitor LY294002
(LY) at a concentration of 0.0 (DMSO alone) or 10 nM in the presence or
absence of IL-3 as indicated. The number of viable cells was determined
by trypan blue exclusion at over 80 h.
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To explore the potential connections between the Raf and PI3-kinase
pathways, we expressed a dominant active form of mitochondrial Raf (DA
M-Raf-1) in FL5.12 hematopoietic cells. Prior work has established that
DA M-Raf-1 induces Bad phosphorylation and delays apoptosis in
hematopoietic cells (43). In our hands, DA M-Raf-1 also
extended survival of FL5.12 cells for at least 24 h after IL-3
withdrawal (Fig. 7). This survival was
independent of PI3-kinase since wortmannin doses up to 1 µM did not
significantly affect viability. Taken together with the DN M-Raf-1
data, these findings lead us to conclude that M-Raf-1 can rescue the
proapoptotic consequences of PI3-kinase inhibition and that
phosphorylation of Bad at mitochondria is sufficient but not necessary
for survival.

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FIG. 7.
Mitochondrial targeting of Raf confers survival in
FL5.12 cells independently of PI3-kinase activity. FL5.12 cells
infected with retrovirus expressing DA M-Raf-1 (FL:M.RAF) were
subjected to drug selection for 14 days in the presence of IL-3. The
viability of these cells in the absence of IL-3 was measured over
24 h in the presence of 0.0, 0.1, or 1.0 µM PI3-kinase inhibitor
wortmannin (Wort.).
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Bcr-Abl allows cells to retain high-level expression of Bad
protein.
Overexpression of wild-type Bad in FL5.12 cells induces
apoptosis (44). Mutations in the BH3 domain (Bcl-2 homology
domain 2) of Bad impair apoptotic activity, supporting the concept that the proapoptotic function of Bad is most likely mediated by complex formation with other Bcl-2 family members such as Bcl-XL or
Bcl-2, which leads to inhibition of their antiapoptotic function
(20, 45). One prediction of our observation that Bcr-Abl
survival pathways overcome the proapoptotic effects of Bad is that
cells expressing Bcr-Abl should tolerate high levels of Bad protein expression. To test this hypothesis, we infected parental or
Bcr-Abl-expressing FL5.12 cells with retroviruses expressing HA-Bad and
then derived stable lines by selection in the antibiotic G418 in the
presence of IL-3. Ectopic expression of HA-Bad was demonstrated by
immunoblot analysis in both populations immediately after the infection
(data not shown) and after 2 weeks of G418 selection (Fig.
8, Early). However, HA-Bad expression
could no longer be detected after 4 weeks of passage in three
independent experiments, despite continued selection in IL-3 and G418
(figure 8, Middle and Late). These results indicate selection against
high-level expression of Bad, consistent with its proapoptotic
function. The fact that this counterselection occurs even in the
presence of cytokine argues that IL-3, which activates a pathway
leading to Bad phosphorylation (10), is insufficient to
overcome the Bad-mediated proapoptotic signal when the protein is
expressed at high levels. Indeed, in previous reports of constitutive
Bad overexpression in hematopoietic cells, investigators have
overexpressed Bcl-2 in the same cells to counteract the effects of Bad
overexpression (10, 46). In contrast to the parental line,
Bcr-Abl-expressing FL5.12 cells maintained high-level HA-Bad expression
throughout the period of drug selection (Fig. 8) and continued to do so
for several months in culture (data not shown). These data indicate
that Bcr-Abl blocks counterselection against high-level Bad expression
whereas IL-3 does not. Taken together with the biochemical experiments showing PI3-kinase and Raf-dependent Bad phosphorylation, these data
provide functional evidence for inactivation of Bad activity by
Bcr-Abl.

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FIG. 8.
Bcr-Abl prevents selection against Bad overexpression in
hematopoietic cells. Parental or Bcr-Abl-expressing FL5.12 cells were
infected with retrovirus expressing HA-Bad/Neo and cultured in G418 to
select for infected cells. The level of HA-Bad was measured by
immunoblot analysis of whole-cell lysates using anti-HA antibody at
different time points after the infection. Lane 1 contains uninfected
cells to show the level of background in FL5.12 cells observed with
this antibody.
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DISCUSSION |
Although it is clear that cytokines and growth factors deliver
signals to the apoptotic machinery that promote cell survival, the
details of how these survival signals are delivered is not fully
examined. To date, two general mechanisms have been implicated: modulation of the level of antiapoptotic proteins such as Bcl-2 and
Bcl-XL (reviewed in reference 14) and
inhibition of the activity of proapoptotic proteins such as Bad through
posttranslational modifications (43, 46). Since Bcr-Abl
protects hematopoietic cells from apoptosis in response to a wide range
of stimuli including cytokine withdrawal, chemotherapy, irradiation,
and Fas activation (2, 3, 12, 24-26), it is likely to
function at a distal point in the apoptosis pathway, perhaps involving
Bcl-2 family members. Previous work has shown that some cell lines
expressing Bcr-Abl have elevated levels of either Bcl-2 (34)
or Bcl-XL (4). Here we show that Bcr-Abl also
activates a pathway that leads to phosphorylation of Bad. These
observations provide evidence for posttranslational modification of the
apoptosis machinery as a mechanism of enhanced cell survival in CML.
Once phosphorylated, the proapoptotic Bad protein is unable to interact
with and inhibit Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL (46);
therefore, the antiapoptotic effects of these proteins are unopposed.
In conjunction with previously documented effects of Bcr-Abl on
transcription of Bcl-2 (34) and Bcl-XL (4), the effects of Bad allow Bcr-Abl to effectively tilt
the balance of competing death versus survival signals in favor of survival.
Our data further clarify the role of the role of the PI3-kinase/Akt
pathway in the survival function of Bcr-Abl. Bcr-Abl induces Bad
phosphorylation at residue 136, the consensus site for the kinase Akt.
In addition, a dominant negative form of Akt as well as inhibitors of
PI3-kinase effectively blocked Bcr-Abl-induced phosphorylation of Bad.
The survival function of Bcr-Abl was also impaired in the presence of
PI3-kinase inhibitors. These results are in agreement with established
antiapoptotic mechanisms of cytokines such as IL-3. However, our
findings also establish the existence of PI3-kinase-dependent,
Bad-independent signaling pathways downstream of Bcr-Abl. Stable
overexpression of DN M-Raf-1 in Bcr-Abl allowed us to isolate a
subpopulation of cells which remained viable in the absence of
detectable Bad phosphorylation. This result indicates that an
alternative PI3-kinase-dependent pathway, also activated by Bcr-Abl,
can bypass the need to deactivate Bad through phosphorylation. Certain
cytokines such as IL-4 may also confer survival without affecting Bad
phosphorylation (37).
The fact that a dominant negative mutant of Raf-1 targeted to
mitochondria also blocks Bcr-Abl-induced Bad phosphorylation raises the
question of how the Raf and the PI3-kinase/Akt pathways are connected.
First, it is possible that Raf is part of the PI3-kinase/Akt/Bad pathway. Recent studies have reported that overexpression of the active
form of Akt, in the absence of Bcr-Abl, can induce plasma membrane and
mitochondrial Raf activation through a PKC-dependent pathway
(22). Alternatively, the Raf and PI3-kinase/Akt pathways may
transduce signals independently to common effector molecules such as
Bad. Several lines of evidence suggest that Bad can be phosphorylated
independently of PI3-kinase and Akt. Studies of the GM-CSF receptor
demonstrate a PI3-kinase/Akt-independent pathway leading to
phosphorylation of Bad (37). Raf can directly phosphorylate Bad even when the characterized phosphorylation sites Ser112 and Ser136
are mutated (J. C. Reed, unpublished data). Our studies of Bcr-Abl
suggest that Raf and PI3-kinase exert their antiapoptotic activity
through distinct but overlapping pathways. By isolating a population of
Bcr-Abl-expressing cells which survive in the setting of Raf
inhibition, we were able to demonstrate an effect of PI3-kinase
inhibition that is distinct from Raf inhibition. In addition, we have
shown that mitochondrion-targeted Raf can phosphorylate Bad and confer
a survival signal in hematopoietic cells even in the setting of
PI3-kinase inhibition. While further work is required to fully
delineate these two signals, the collective data suggest that
inhibition of both Raf and PI3-kinase may be required to fully impair
the Bcr-Abl survival function. This model is consistent with prior work
showing that multiple independent pathways contribute to the
transformation activity of Bcr-Abl (1).
In addition to showing that the PI3-kinase and Raf pathways both play a
role in Bcr-Abl signaling, our work also provides direct evidence of a
functional link between Bcr-Abl and Bad. Specifically, we show that
Bcr-Abl allows hematopoietic cells to retain high-level Bad expression.
The fact that Bcr-Abl prevents counterselection against high-level Bad
expression whereas IL-3 does not argues for important differences
between IL-3-mediated and Bcr-Abl-mediated signaling. One possibility
is that both signals function through the same pathway(s) but the
magnitude of the Bcr-Abl signal is stronger, such that a greater pool
of Bad protein becomes phosphorylated and inactivated. Alternatively,
Bcr-Abl may activate additional pathways that lead to more efficient
inactivation of Bad than IL-3 alone. Bcr-Abl may also modulate the
levels of antiapoptotic proteins such as Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL.
In conjunction with recent evidence that survival signals mediated by
receptor TKs such as those for NGF, platelet-derived growth factor, and
insulin-like growth factor 1 lead to phosphorylation of Bad
(9), our findings demonstrate that cytoplasmic TKs can also
activate signaling pathways that directly affect the apoptotic machinery. Importantly, our results with Bcr-Abl establish that constitutive activation of these pathways can contribute to the neoplastic state. These findings have important therapeutic
implications. Blockade of this survival pathway might halt the
accumulation of myeloid cells that occurs in chronic-phase CML and
increase their sensitivity to chemotherapeutic drugs.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Michael Greenberg for antibody, Elizabeth Major for help
with early phases of this work, Xinyi Wu for assistance with cloning,
Lisa Dove for manuscript preparation, and David Chang, Chris Denny, Ke
Shuai, and Owen Witte for comments.
This work was supported by grants from the American Cancer Society
(C.L.S.), National Institutes of Health (C.L.S. and J.C.R.) and the
James S. McDonnell Foundation (C.L.S.). H.G.W. is an AACR Research
Fellow in Basic or Translational Research sponsored by the Sidney
Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research. C.L.S. is a Scholar of the
Leukemia Society of America.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: 11-934 Factor
Building, UCLA/Hematology-Oncology, 10833 Le Conte Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095-1678. Phone: (310) 206-5585. Fax: (310) 206-8502. E-mail: csawyers{at}mednet.ucla.edu.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2000, p. 1179-1186, Vol. 20, No. 4
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Dai, Y., Rahmani, M., Pei, X.-Y., Dent, P., Grant, S.
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Nimmanapalli, R., Bali, P., O'Bryan, E., Fuino, L., Guo, F., Wu, J., Houghton, P., Bhalla, K.
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Yan, B., Zemskova, M., Holder, S., Chin, V., Kraft, A., Koskinen, P. J., Lilly, M.
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Clark, S. S., Zhong, L., Filiault, D., Perman, S., Ren, Z., Gould, M., Yang, X.
(2003). Anti-Leukemia Effect of Perillyl Alcohol in Bcr/Abl-Transformed Cells Indirectly Inhibits Signaling through Mek in a Ras- and Raf-Independent Fashion. Clin. Cancer Res.
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Laurent, E., Mitchell, D. L., Estrov, Z., Lowery, M., Tucker, S. L., Talpaz, M., Kurzrock, R.
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Wong, S., McLaughlin, J., Cheng, D., Witte, O. N.
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Nimmanapalli, R., Fuino, L., Stobaugh, C., Richon, V., Bhalla, K.
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Golas, J. M., Arndt, K., Etienne, C., Lucas, J., Nardin, D., Gibbons, J., Frost, P., Ye, F., Boschelli, D. H., Boschelli, F.
(2003). SKI-606, a 4-Anilino-3-quinolinecarbonitrile Dual Inhibitor of Src and Abl Kinases, Is a Potent Antiproliferative Agent against Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Cells in Culture and Causes Regression of K562 Xenografts in Nude Mice. Cancer Res.
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(2002). Molecular Characterization and Sensitivity of STI-571 (Imatinib Mesylate, Gleevec)-resistant, Bcr-Abl-positive, Human Acute Leukemia Cells to SRC Kinase Inhibitor PD180970 and 17-Allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin. Cancer Res.
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Dos Santos, P., Kowaltowski, A. J., Laclau, M. N., Seetharaman, S., Paucek, P., Boudina, S., Thambo, J.-B., Tariosse, L., Garlid, K. D.
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Tomasson, M. H., Williams, I. R., Li, S., Kutok, J., Cain, D., Gillessen, S., Dranoff, G., Van Etten, R. A., Gilliland, D. G.
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Jung, F., Haendeler, J., Goebel, C., Zeiher, A. M., Dimmeler, S.
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Gesbert, F., Sellers, W. R., Signoretti, S., Loda, M., Griffin, J. D.
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Nguyen, M. H.-H., Ho, J. M.-Y., Beattie, B. K., Barber, D. L.
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