| Literature DB >> 26327213 |
Sahra Bodo1,2, Magali Svrcek1,2,3, Isabelle Sourrouille1,2, Peggy Cuillières-Dartigues4, Tatiana Ledent1,2, Sylvie Dumont2,5, Laetitia Dinard1,2, Philippe Lafitte1,2, Camille Capel1,2, Ada Collura1,2, Olivier Buhard1,2, Kristell Wanherdrick1,2, Alexandra Chalastanis1,2, Virginie Penard-Lacronique6, Bettina Fabiani3, Jean-François Fléjou1,2,3, Nicole Brousse7, Laurent Beaugerie2,8, Alex Duval1,2, Martine Muleris1,2.
Abstract
Mismatch-repair (MMR)-deficient cells show increased in vitro tolerance to thiopurines because they escape apoptosis resulting from MMR-dependent signaling of drug-induced DNA damage. Prolonged treatment with immunosuppressants including azathioprine (Aza), a thiopurine prodrug, has been suggested as a risk factor for the development of late onset leukemias/lymphomas displaying a microsatellite instability (MSI) phenotype, the hallmark of a defective MMR system. We performed a dose effect study in mice to investigate the development of MSI lymphomas associated with long term Aza treatment. Over two years, Aza was administered to mice that were wild type, null or heterozygous for the MMR gene Msh2. Ciclosporin A, an immunosuppressant with an MMR-independent signaling, was also administered to Msh2(wt) mice as controls. Survival, lymphoma incidence and MSI tumor phenotype were investigated. Msh2(+/-) mice were found more tolerant than Msh2(wt) mice to the cytotoxicity of Aza. In Msh2(+/-) mice, Aza induced a high incidence of MSI lymphomas in a dose-dependent manner. In Msh2(wt) mice, a substantial lifespan was only observed at the lowest Aza dose. It was associated with the development of lymphomas, one of which displayed the MSI phenotype, unlike the CsA-induced lymphomas. Our findings define Aza as a risk factor for an MSI-driven lymphomagenesis process.Entities:
Keywords: azathioprine; iatrogenic cancer; microsatellite instability; pharmacogenetics; thiopurine tolerance
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26327213 PMCID: PMC4694807 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Effect of azathioprine treatment on survival, lymphoma incidence and MSI tumor phenotype in Msh2 and Msh2 mice
A. Evidence for a dose-response relationship between azathioprine treatment and the survival of Msh2 mice: Kaplan–Meier survival analysis of untreated and azathioprine-treated Msh2 mice (left) and Msh2 mice (right). Survival curves for Msh2 mice after Aza50 treatment are from our previous study [9]. All P values are two-sided. Log-rank test. B. Lymphoma occurrence and delay of onset in the different mice cohorts according to Msh2 (left) or Msh2 (right) genotype. Mean age of lymphoma onset and standard error of the mean are indicated. C. Evidence for a dose-response relationship between azathioprine treatment and incidence of MSI phenotype in lymphomas of Msh2 mice. Aza10 = azathioprine 10 mg/L; Aza30 = azathioprine 30 mg/L; Aza50 = azathioprine 50 mg/L.
Figure 2Effect of azathioprine and ciclosporin A treatments on survival, lymphoma incidence and MSI tumor phenotype in Msh2 mice
A. Evidence for a dose-response relationship between immunosuppressive treatment and the survival of Msh2 mice: Kaplan–Meier survival analysis of untreated, azathioprine- and ciclosporin A-treated Msh2 mice. All P values are two-sided. Log-rank test. B. Occurrence of lymphoproliferations and delay of onset in the different cohorts of Msh2 mice. C. Lymphoma incidence. Fisher's exact test; ns=not significant. D. Incidence of MSI phenotype in lymphomas. Aza10 = azathioprine 10 mg/L; Aza30 = azathioprine 30 mg/L; Aza50 = azathioprine 50 mg/L; CsA = ciclosporin A 300 mg/L.
Figure 3Characterization of the MSI lymphoma syndrome arising in Aza10-treated Msh2 mouse
A. Histological characterization showing hematoxylin–eosin staining of splenic lymphoma. T indicates tumor cells; NT indicates normal lymphocytes. B. Immunohistochemistry of spleen tissue sections. Tumor cells (black arrows) stained positively. Normal lymphocytes (white arrows) showed less pronounced staining of MMR proteins due to their lower proliferative rate. Antibodies against Mlh1 and Pms2 provided less intense IHC staining however positive staining was retained in tumor cells (black arrows). An IHC picture of a non-MSI / MMR-proficient splenic lymphoma can be seen in the Supplementary Figure S2 to illustrate that technical point. C. Allelic profiles of the three noncoding microsatellite markers (A24, T40 and A22) displaying shorter alleles (arrows) for the three markers in tumor (spleen) compared to control (muscle) tissue. Dashed vertical lines indicate the predominant allele size observed in control DNA. Predominant allele size (in base pair) is indicated in the box below each profile.