| Literature DB >> 26675346 |
Viktor Ljungström1, Diego Cortese1, Emma Young1, Tatjana Pandzic1, Larry Mansouri1, Karla Plevova2, Stavroula Ntoufa3, Panagiotis Baliakas1, Ruth Clifford4, Lesley-Ann Sutton1, Stuart J Blakemore5, Niki Stavroyianni6, Andreas Agathangelidis7, Davide Rossi8, Martin Höglund9, Jana Kotaskova2, Gunnar Juliusson10, Chrysoula Belessi11, Nicholas Chiorazzi12, Panagiotis Panagiotidis13, Anton W Langerak14, Karin E Smedby15, David Oscier16, Gianluca Gaidano8, Anna Schuh4, Frederic Davi17, Christiane Pott18, Jonathan C Strefford5, Livio Trentin19, Sarka Pospisilova2, Paolo Ghia7, Kostas Stamatopoulos20, Tobias Sjöblom1, Richard Rosenquist1.
Abstract
Fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) is first-line treatment of medically fit chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients; however, despite good response rates, many patients eventually relapse. Although recent high-throughput studies have identified novel recurrent genetic lesions in adverse prognostic CLL, the mechanisms leading to relapse after FCR therapy are not completely understood. To gain insight into this issue, we performed whole-exome sequencing of sequential samples from 41 CLL patients who were uniformly treated with FCR but relapsed after a median of 2 years. In addition to mutations with known adverse-prognostic impact (TP53, NOTCH1, ATM, SF3B1, NFKBIE, and BIRC3), a large proportion of cases (19.5%) harbored mutations in RPS15, a gene encoding a component of the 40S ribosomal subunit. Extended screening, totaling 1119 patients, supported a role for RPS15 mutations in aggressive CLL, with one-third of RPS15-mutant cases also carrying TP53 aberrations. In most cases, selection of dominant, relapse-specific subclones was observed over time. However, RPS15 mutations were clonal before treatment and remained stable at relapse. Notably, all RPS15 mutations represented somatic missense variants and resided within a 7 amino-acid, evolutionarily conserved region. We confirmed the recently postulated direct interaction between RPS15 and MDM2/MDMX and transient expression of mutant RPS15 revealed defective regulation of endogenous p53 compared with wild-type RPS15. In summary, we provide novel insights into the heterogeneous genetic landscape of CLL relapsing after FCR treatment and highlight a novel mechanism underlying clinical aggressiveness involving a mutated ribosomal protein, potentially representing an early genetic lesion in CLL pathobiology.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26675346 PMCID: PMC4768426 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2015-10-674572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113