| Literature DB >> 27447965 |
Pier Paolo Leoncini1,2, Alice Bertaina1,2, Dimitrios Papaioannou3, Christian Flotho4, Riccardo Masetti5, Silvia Bresolin6, Giuseppe Menna7, Nicola Santoro8, Marco Zecca9, Giuseppe Basso6, Giovanni Nigita10, Dario Veneziano10, Sara Pagotto11, Katia D'Ovidio1, Rossella Rota1, Adrienne Dorrance3, Carlo M Croce10, Charlotte Niemeyer4, Franco Locatelli1,9, Ramiro Garzon3.
Abstract
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is an aggressive leukemia of early childhood characterized by aberrant proliferation of myelomonocytic cells and hypersensitivity to GM-CSF stimulation. Mutually exclusive mutations in the RAS/ERK pathway genes such as PTPN11, NRAS, KRAS, CBL, or NF1 are found in ~90% of the cases. These mutations give rise to disease at least in part by activating STAT5 through phosphorylation and by promoting cell growth. MicroRNAs (miRs) are small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression, which are often deregulated in leukemia. However, little is known about their role in JMML. Here, we report distinctive miR expression signatures associated with the molecular subgroups of JMML. Among the downregulated miRs in JMML, miR-150-5p was found to target STAT5b, a gene which is often over-activated in JMML, and contributes to the characteristic aberrant signaling of this disorder. Moreover, loss of miR-150-5p and upregulation of STAT5b expression were also identified in a murine model of JMML. Ectopic overexpression of miR-150-5p in mononuclear cells from three JMML patients significantly decreased cell proliferation. Altogether, our data indicate that miR expression is deregulated in JMML and may play a role in the pathogenesis of this disorder by modulating key effectors of cytokine receptor pathways.Entities:
Keywords: GM-CSF; JMML; STAT5b; miR-150; microRNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27447965 PMCID: PMC5342425 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.10577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
JMML patients characteristics
| Sample | Gender | Age (years) | Karyotype | Mutation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JMML 1 | F | 1.3 | ND | CBL |
| JMML 2 | F | 6.2 | normal | CBL |
| JMML 3 | ND | 0.6 | normal | CBL |
| JMML 4 | M | 0.9 | ND | KRAS |
| JMML 5 | M | 0.9 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 6 | M | 0.7 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 7 | F | 1.6 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 8 | F | 1.5 | ND | KRAS |
| JMML 9 | M | 1.5 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 10 | M | 2.1 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 11 | M | 0.5 | +mar | KRAS |
| JMML 12 | M | 0.1 | normal | KRAS |
| JMML 13 | M | 0.5 | −7, +mar | KRAS |
| JMML 14 | M | 0.3 | −7, +mar | KRAS |
| JMML 15 | M | 0.9 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 16 | F | 1.7 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 17 | F | 1.7 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 18 | M | 1.0 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 19 | M | 1.1 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 20 | ND | 1.2 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 21 | M | 0.3 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 22 | M | 5.4 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 23 | M | 2.6 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 24 | M | 0.5 | normal | NRAS |
| JMML 25 | M | 1.5 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 26 | F | 5.7 | −7, +21,+mar | PTPN11 |
| JMML 27 | M | ND | ND | PTPN11 |
| JMML 28 | F | 2.4 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 29 | F | 0.2 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 30 | F | 3.7 | ND | PTPN11 |
| JMML 31 | F | 0.4 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 32 | M | 6.2 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 33 | M | 3.7 | normal | PTPN11 |
| JMML 34 | F | 2.0 | ND | PTPN11 |
| JMML 35 | M | ND | ND | PTPN11 |
| JMML 36 | M | ND | ND | PTPN11 |
| JMML 37 | F | 0.9 | −7 | UNKN |
| JMML 38 | M | 9.1 | −7 | UNKN |
| JMML 39 | M | ND | normal | UNKN |
| JMML 40 | M | 2.6 | normal | UNKN |
ND= Not Determined; +mar= Marker Chromosome; +21= Chromosome 21 trisomy; −7= Chromosome 7 monosomy; normal= Normal Karyotype
Deregulated microRNAs in JMML
| Gene Name | Accession # | P-value | Fold-Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| hsa-miR-630 | MIMAT0003299 | 0.001 | 4.83 |
| hsa-miR-3195 | MIMAT0015079 | 0.014 | 2.70 |
| hsa-miR-575 | MIMAT0003240 | 0.014 | 2.69 |
| hsa-miR-4508 | MIMAT0019045 | 0.016 | 2.58 |
| hsa-miR-224-5p | MIMAT0000281 | 0.024 | 2.34 |
| hsa-miR-320e | MIMAT0015072 | 0.007 | 2.26 |
| hsa-miR-494 | MIMAT0002816 | 0.023 | 2.03 |
| hsa-miR-548ai | MIMAT0018989 | 0.009 | 1.99 |
| hsa-miR-222-3p | MIMAT0000279 | 0.018 | 1.69 |
| hsa-miR-23a-3p | MIMAT0000078 | 0.040 | 1.61 |
| hsa-miR-338-3p | MIMAT0000763 | 0.042 | 1.57 |
| hsa-miR-150-5p | MIMAT0000451 | 0.001 | −5.21 |
| hsa-let-7g-5p | MIMAT0000414 | 0.002 | −3.16 |
| hsa-miR-1260a | MIMAT0005911 | 0.009 | −3.01 |
| hsa-let-7a-5p | MIMAT0000062 | 0.010 | −2.98 |
| hsa-miR-4454 | MIMAT0018976 | 0.021 | −2.64 |
| hsa-miR-148a-3p | MIMAT0000243 | 0.030 | −2.31 |
| hsa-miR-146b-5p | MIMAT0002809 | 0.009 | −2.12 |
| hsa-miR-342-3p | MIMAT0000753 | 0.010 | −2.11 |
| hsa-let-7f-5p | MIMAT0000067 | 0.021 | −2.03 |
| hsa-miR-26a-5p | MIMAT0000082 | 0.034 | −2.01 |
| hsa-let-7d-5p | MIMAT0000065 | 0.038 | −2.01 |
| hsa-miR-30b-5p | MIMAT0000420 | 0.019 | −1.96 |
| hsa-miR-29b-3p | MIMAT0000100 | 0.044 | −1.94 |
| hsa-miR-29a-3p | MIMAT0000086 | 0.024 | −1.70 |
Significant deregulated microRNAs in JMML patients compared to Healthy Donors controls (P<0.05; see miR expression data analysis paragraph in Matherials and Methods section). Accession numbers from miRBase (http://www.mirbase.org) are reported for each miRNA.
Figure 1Deregulated microRNA Signature in JMML
A. Venn diagram showing deregulated microRNAs (miRs) in JMML patients compared to controls. MiRs belonging to either PTPN11, KRAS and NRAS are shown in detail (See also Supplemental Table 1). CBL (n=3) and unknown patients (n=4) are not included due to low numbers of samples or unknown mutation status. B. Histograms showing miR-150-5p expression in a subset of JMML patients (n=30) vs controls (n=8) as measured by qRT-PCR (P<0.001). This subset of JMML patients was choosen based on the availability of RNA after the nCounter miR profiling. C. miR-150-5p expression according to the molecular subset of JMML and controls as measured by qRT-PCR (KRAS P=0.002; PTPN11 P=0.001; UNKN P=0.045). Results are shown as relative expression. D. MiR-630 expression in a subset of JMML patients (n=30) vs controls (n=8) as measured by qRT-PCR. E. MiR-630 expression according to the molecular subset of JMML and controls as measured by qRT-PCR. Results are shown as relative. P-values were calculated on three technical replicates using Unpaired two-tailed t-test. Unreported P-values are greater than 0.05 (P>0.05).
Figure 2MiR-150-5p directly targets STAT5b
A. Graph showing the interaction between the miR-150-5p seed sequence and the STAT5b 3′UTR. Pairing starts from 4462 to 4468 nuclotide (NM_012448; GenBank). B. Luciferase reporter assay for the interaction between STAT5b 3′UTR and miR-150-5p. Firefly Luciferase (FLuc) activities obtained from 293T cells co-transfected with wild type (WT) STAT5b 3′UTR construct and miR-150-5p mimic (P=0.026) or scrambled (SCR) oligonucleotides (control). Results are shown after normalization with Renilla Luciferaese. Mutant STAT5b 3′UTR contsructs (MUT) were also co-transfected with miR-150-5p mimic or SCR oligonucleotides. Results are representative of at least three independent experiments±SD. P-values were calculated using Unpaired two-tailed t-test. P-values greater than 0.05 (P>0.05) were not reported. C. STAT5b mRNA expression in OCI-AML-3 (P=0.006), K562 (P<0.001) and KG1a (P=0.027) cell lines after transfection with miR-150-5p or empty vector control (CTR) as measured by qRT-PCR. Results are shown as fold change in STAT5b mRNA expression with respect to control sample at 24 hours (CTR). D. Western Blotting analysis of Stat5, phosphorylated Stat5 (p-Stat5) and β-actin (loading control) expression in OCI-AML-3, K562 and KG1a cell lines after transfection with miR-150-5p or empty vector control (CTR). Densitometry plot shows STAT5 upregulation in cell lines. Optical density was calculated using β-actin as reference. Results are representative of at least two independent experiments. Densitometry histograms are relative to represented experiment below.
Figure 3Bone marrow and splenic cells from a Ptpn11 mutated murine model resembling JMML exhibit miR-150-5p expression downregulation and STAT5b upregulation
A. miR-150-5p expression in whole BM cells, B. unselected splenocytes and C. c-kit (CD117) positive or D. c-Kit negative selected splenocytes of Mx1-Cre; LSL-Ptpn11-D61Y (DY) mice and control mice (Mx1-Cre or CRE) as measured by qRT-PCR. Results are shown as relative expression after normalization with snoU6. E. STAT5b mRNA expression in whole BM cells from DY and CRE mice. F. Western Blotting analysis of Stat5, p-STAT5 and β-actin of whole BM cells from DY and CRE mice.
Figure 4MiR-150-5p overexpression decreases hypersensitivity of JMML bone marrow (BM) mononuclear cells to GM-CSF
A. MiR-150-5p expression levels in BM mononuclear cells from two JMML patients infected with miR-150-5p overexpressing lentivirus or empty vector (Control) evaluated by qRT-PCR. Expression levels of U44 were used to normalize the raw miR-150-5p values. B. In vitro proliferation assay of BM mononuclear cells from three newly diagnosed JMML patients after infection with miR-150-5p lentivirus or empty vector (control). After infection with GFP expressing constructs, GFP-sorted cells were mixed with non-GFP cells at a 4 to 1 ratio. GFP-positivity was evaluated by flow cytometry. The frequency of GFP positive cells in control versus miR-150-5p overexpressing JMML cell populations was calculated for a maximum period of 7 days after sorting the cells.