| Literature DB >> 18362173 |
Elisabetta Flex1, Valentina Petrangeli, Lorenzo Stella, Sabina Chiaretti, Tekla Hornakova, Laurent Knoops, Cristina Ariola, Valentina Fodale, Emmanuelle Clappier, Francesca Paoloni, Simone Martinelli, Alessandra Fragale, Massimo Sanchez, Simona Tavolaro, Monica Messina, Giovanni Cazzaniga, Andrea Camera, Giovanni Pizzolo, Assunta Tornesello, Marco Vignetti, Angela Battistini, Hélène Cavé, Bruce D Gelb, Jean-Christophe Renauld, Andrea Biondi, Stefan N Constantinescu, Robin Foà, Marco Tartaglia.
Abstract
Aberrant signal transduction contributes substantially to leukemogenesis. The Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) gene encodes a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that noncovalently associates with a variety of cytokine receptors and plays a nonredundant role in lymphoid cell precursor proliferation, survival, and differentiation. We report that somatic mutations in JAK1 occur in individuals with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). JAK1 mutations were more prevalent among adult subjects with the T cell precursor ALL, where they accounted for 18% of cases, and were associated with advanced age at diagnosis, poor response to therapy, and overall prognosis. All mutations were missense, and some were predicted to destabilize interdomain interactions controlling the activity of the kinase. Three mutations that were studied promoted JAK1 gain of function and conferred interleukin (IL)-3-independent growth in Ba/F3 cells and/or IL-9-independent resistance to dexamethasone-induced apoptosis in T cell lymphoma BW5147 cells. Such effects were associated with variably enhanced activation of multiple downstream signaling pathways. Leukemic cells with mutated JAK1 alleles shared a gene expression signature characterized by transcriptional up-regulation of genes positively controlled by JAK signaling. Our findings implicate dysregulated JAK1 function in ALL, particularly of T cell origin, and point to this kinase as a target for the development of novel antileukemic drugs.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18362173 PMCID: PMC2292215 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20072182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307
List of nonsynonymous JAK1 changes identified in subjects with ALL
| Cohort and lineage | Number of | Nucleotide | Exon | Amino acid | Domain | Mutation/ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult ALL | ||||||
| B-ALL | 88 | |||||
| 1 | 184A>G | 2 | Ile62Val | FERM | Polymorphism | |
| 1 | 611A>T | 5 | Lys204Met | FERM | Mutation | |
| 1 | 1901C>A | 13 | Ala634Asp | Pseudokinase | Mutation | |
| 1 | 2171G>A | 15 | Arg724His | Pseudokinase | Mutation | |
| T-ALL | 38 | |||||
| 1 | 184A>G | 2 | Ile62Val | FERM | Polymorphism | |
| 1 | 1078C>T | 7 | Arg360Trp | FERM | Polymorphism | |
| 1 | 1535C>T | 10 | Ser512Leu | SH2 | Mutation | |
| 1 | 1901C>A | 13 | Ala634Asp | Pseudokinase | Mutation | |
| 3 | 2171G>A | 15 | Arg724His | Pseudokinase | Mutation | |
| 1 | 2635C>A | 18 | Arg879Ser | Kinase | Mutation | |
| 1 | 2635C>T | 18 | Arg879Cys | Kinase | Mutation | |
| 1 | 2636G>A | 18 | Arg879His | Kinase | Mutation | |
| Childhood ALL | ||||||
| B-ALL | 85 | |||||
| T-ALL | 49 | |||||
| 1 | 1957C>T | 13 | Leu653Phe | Pseudokinase | Mutation |
This change was observed in unaffected individuals.
This change was not present among 335 population-matching control individuals.
This change was present at remission.
This change was not present at remission.
This change was not present at remission in the one individual analyzed.
This subject carried a concomitant 2171G→A change.
Figure 1.Somatic (A) Representative electropherograms showing the occurrence of somatically acquired JAK1 mutations in subjects with T-ALL. In all cases, mutations were observed at diagnosis (top), but were undetectable during remission (bottom). (B) JAK1 domain structure and location of affected residues. The predicted amino acid substitutions resulting from the JAK1 mutations are positioned below the diagram of the protein with its functional domains indicated (left) and shown in JAK1 three-dimensional modeled structure (right). (C) Electropherograms showing the occurrence of mutations in a fraction of leukemic cells of two individuals with T-ALL. In both patients, the mutant allele constituted only a portion of the amplified fragment from BM obtained at diagnosis (blasts >70% of total cells; top). The heterozygous status of each subject for an intragenic polymorphic site (bottom) is shown for comparison.
Figure 2.Functional effects of leukemia-associated (A) STAT1 phosphorylation assays. Basal and IFN-γ–stimulated endogenous STAT1 phosphorylation in JAK1-defective U4C cells transiently transfected with WT JAK1 or selected mutants. Blots are representative of three experiments. (B) STAT1 activation assays. Basal and IFN-γ–stimulated endogenous STAT1 transcriptional activity in JAK1-defective U4C cells transiently cotransfected with p-GAS-Luc and phRL-TK constructs, and WT JAK1 or a mutant allele. STAT1-induced luciferase gene expression levels were determined by measuring the luciferase activity (CPS, counts per second) normalized to the activity of the Renilla luciferase, using a dual-luciferase reporter assay system. Activity ratios are expressed as the mean of three replicates ± the SD. (C) Ba/F3 survival assays. WT or mutant Jak1-transduced Ba/F3 cells were grown in the absence of IL-3 (top) or with 0.5 or 5% WEHI-3B cell CM as source of IL-3 (bottom). Cell numbers (mean of three replicates ± the SD) were counted at the indicated time points (top) or at day 3 of culture (bottom). (D) Stat5, Akt, and ERK phosphorylation assays. Endogenous Stat5 Tyr694, Akt Ser473, and ERK1/2 Thr202/Tyr204 phosphorylation levels from lysates of Ba/F3 cells transduced with WT Jak1 or a mutant form and cultured without IL-3 (left) or with 2% WEHI-3B cell CM as the source of IL-3 (right). Activation of Stat5 (pStat5/Stat5), AKT (pAkt/Akt), and ERK1/2 (pERK/ERK) is expressed as a multiple of activation in untransduced cells. Blots are representative of at least three experiments performed. (E) BW5147 proliferation assays. WT or mutant Jak1 transduced BW5147 cells were grown in presence of 200 μg/ml dexamethasone and 50 μg/ml cyclosporine A, in absence (left) or with different concentrations (right) of IL-9. After 72 h, proliferation was measured after [3H]thymidine was added to the cultures (6 h). Data are shown as the means of three replicates ± the SD. For convenience, the amino acid changes affecting residues Ala633, Arg723, and Arg878 of the murine Jak1 protein (encoded by the pMX-Jak1-IRES-GFP constructs used to transduce the Ba/F3 and BW5147 cell lines) are indicated according to the homologous residues in human JAK1.
Figure 3.Gene expression profiles and clinical relevance of somatic (A) Supervised hierarchical clustering of gene expression profiles performed on blasts from 16 adult T-ALL patients, with (orange) or without (green) a JAK1 mutation. (B) Kaplan-Meier estimates of DFS (top) and OS (bottom) in subjects with (red) or without (black) a JAK mutation. Multivariate analysis confirmed the statistical significance of the reduced DFS and OV among JAK1 mutation-positive patients, and excluded a significant contribution of the more advanced age of these subjects.