We aimed to investigate AURKA, BORA and PLK1 mRNA expression in unfractionated bone-marrow aspirates of 43 patients with myelofibrosis (28 primary-/PMF, 15 secondary-myelofibrosis/SMF) and 12 controls and to assess their clinical correlations.
The similarities among PMF, liver fibrosis, and lung fibrosis were modest and included activation of integrin-α9 and tropomyosin-α1 between PMF and liver fibrosis, and of ectoderm-neural cortex protein 1 and FRAS1-related extracellular matrix protein 1 between PMF and lung fibrosis, but not TGF-β.
Genotyping of >2000 colonies from CD133+HSC and progenitors from PMF patients confirmed the complex genetic heterogeneity within the neoplastic population.
LIG3 as an essential part of the SSB was significantly lower expressed compared to controls in all three entities (essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), and myelofibrosis (MF)).
One hundred five Philadelphia-negative MPN patients, including polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythaemia (ET), and primary myelofibrosis (PMF) were initially screened for JAK2 mutations by amplification-refractory mutation system (ARMS-PCR) methodology and were further subjected to detection of CALR gene mutations by our in-house assay, a PCR based amplicon length differentiation assay (PCR-ALDA).
To determine the impact of ARCH/CHIP-related mutations for development of fibrosis in primary myelofibrosis (PMF), the mutational status of cases with fibrotic progression from grade 0 to grade 2/3 (n = 77) as evidenced by follow-up bone marrow biopsies (median 6.2 years) was compared with prefibrotic PMF samples without development of fibrosis (n = 27; median follow-up 7.3 years).
BM from PMF expressed a noncanonical transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signature, which included activation of ID1, JUN, GADD45b, and genes with binding motifs for the JUN transcriptional complex AP1.
The similarities among PMF, liver fibrosis, and lung fibrosis were modest and included activation of integrin-α9 and tropomyosin-α1 between PMF and liver fibrosis, and of ectoderm-neural cortex protein 1 and FRAS1-related extracellular matrix protein 1 between PMF and lung fibrosis, but not TGF-β.
These results indicate that NFκB and MAP kinase signaling maintain cytokine overproduction in MF, and that inhibition of these pathways may provide optimal control of inflammatory pathophysiology in MF.
To determine the impact of ARCH/CHIP-related mutations for development of fibrosis in primary myelofibrosis (PMF), the mutational status of cases with fibrotic progression from grade 0 to grade 2/3 (n = 77) as evidenced by follow-up bone marrow biopsies (median 6.2 years) was compared with prefibrotic PMF samples without development of fibrosis (n = 27; median follow-up 7.3 years).
Here, we performed for the first time a manual and automated quantitative assessment of the CALR mutation load at protein level using CAL2, a recently developed CALR mutation specific monoclonal antibody, on a cohort of 117 patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) or primary myelofibrosis (PMF) and compared the CALR protein mutation loads with the CALR mutation load values established by a molecular assay.
Improvement of the hematologic toxicities of ruxolitinib in patients with MPN-associated myelofibrosis using a combination of thalidomide, stanozolol and prednisone.
The total antioxidant capacity in plasma and erythrocyte catalase (CT) activities was the most prominent in primary myelofibrosis (PMF) with JAK2V617F heterozygosity.
These results indicated that PV dominantly expressed β-catenin and proliferation marker Ki67 in bone marrow, while PMF is linked preferentially to PPAR-γ immunopositive megakaryocytes characterized by abnormal maturation.
Finally, developing a novel ELISA assay, we analyzed samples from patients affected by primary myelofibrosis (PMF), a well-known pathological situation caused by altered TPO signaling, and found that the EDA FN is increased in plasma and BM biopsies of PMF patients as compared with healthy controls, correlating with fibrotic phase.
The similarities among PMF, liver fibrosis, and lung fibrosis were modest and included activation of integrin-α9 and tropomyosin-α1 between PMF and liver fibrosis, and of ectoderm-neural cortex protein 1 and FRAS1-related extracellular matrix protein 1 between PMF and lung fibrosis, but not TGF-β.
These data suggested drug repositioning of the Tbk1 inhibitor CYT387, currently used for the treatment of myelofibrosis and some cancers, as a candidate for regulating the LPS-induced inflammatory response.
The total nitrite/nitrate (NOx) level was augmented in the plasma of PMF patients (p<0.001), while nitrotyrosine and iNOS were generally increased in the granulocytes of MPN patients.
Luspatercept (and sotatercept), ligand traps that particularly inhibit GDF11, lead to RBC transfusion independence in 10% to 50% of lower-risk MDSs resistant to available treatments, and have started to be used in PMF.