| Literature DB >> 26088929 |
Coline Gaillard1, Taku A Tokuyasu2, Galit Rosen3, Jason Sotzen4, Adeline Vitaliano-Prunier5, Ritu Roy2, Emmanuelle Passegué6, Hugues de Thé5, Maria E Figueroa4, Scott C Kogan7.
Abstract
Acute promyelocytic leukemia is an aggressive malignancy characterized by the accumulation of promyelocytes in the bone marrow. PML/RARA is the primary abnormality implicated in this pathology, but the mechanisms by which this chimeric fusion protein initiates disease are incompletely understood. Identifying PML/RARA targets in vivo is critical for comprehending the road to pathogenesis. Utilizing a novel sorting strategy, we isolated highly purified promyelocyte populations from normal and young preleukemic animals, carried out microarray and methylation profiling analyses, and compared the results from the two groups of animals. Surprisingly, in the absence of secondary lesions, PML/RARA had an overall limited impact on both the transcriptome and methylome. Of interest, we did identify down-regulation of secondary and tertiary granule genes as the first step engaging the myeloid maturation block. Although initially not sufficient to arrest terminal granulopoiesis in vivo, such alterations set the stage for the later, complete differentiation block seen in leukemia. Further, gene set enrichment analysis revealed that PML/RARA promyelocytes exhibit a subtle increase in expression of cell cycle genes, and we show that this leads to both increased proliferation of these cells and expansion of the promyelocyte compartment. Importantly, this proliferation signature was absent from the poorly leukemogenic p50/RARA fusion model, implying a critical role for PML in the altered cell-cycle kinetics and ability to initiate leukemia. Thus, our findings challenge the predominant model in the field and we propose that PML/RARA initiates leukemia by subtly shifting cell fate decisions within the promyelocyte compartment. Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26088929 PMCID: PMC5004423 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2014.123018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941