| Literature DB >> 29254279 |
Arndt Borkhardt1, Isidro Sánchez-García2,3, Guillermo Rodríguez-Hernández2,3, Daniel Schäfer1, Ana Gavilán2,3, Carolina Vicente-Dueñas3, Julia Hauer1.
Abstract
ETV6-RUNX1 is associated with the most common subtype of childhood leukemia. Pre-leukaemic clones carrying ETV6-RUNX1 oncogenic lesions are frequently found in neonatal cord blood, but only few ETV6-RUNX1 carriers develop pB-ALL. The highly demanding and pending challenge is to reveal the multistep natural history of ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL, because it can offer non-toxic prophylactic interventions to preleukemic carriers. However, the lack of a genetically engineered ETV6-RUNX1 mouse model mimicking the human pB-ALL has hampered our understanding of the pathogenesis of this disease. This rule has now been broken in a study of the effect of the ETV6-RUNX1 oncogene in cancer development in a mouse model in which oncogene expression is restricted to the stem cell compartment. In this article, we review the different attempts to model this disease, including the recent representative success stories and we discuss its potential application to both identify etiologic factors of childhood ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL and prevent the conversion of a preleukemic clone in an irreversible transformed state.Entities:
Keywords: GEMM; childhood leukemia; epigenetic modulation; infection exposure; mutational pattern
Year: 2017 PMID: 29254279 PMCID: PMC5731989 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.21281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1The natural history of ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL childhood leukemia
Between 1–3% of pre-leukemic clones carrying ETV6-RUNX1 translocation are frequently found in neonatal cord blood, but only few ETV6-RUNX1 carries develop pB-ALL (1/105). Many environmental factors have been pointed out as implicated in this transformation process but the lack of biological evidence has kept environmental factor under suspicion.
Main experimental models of ETV6-RUNX1
| Experimental design | Phenotype | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immunoglobulin heavy chain enhancer/promoter | The mice did not develop leukemia. | 2001 | [ |
| Retroviral gene transfer | T cell leukemia and myeloid leukemia | 2002 | [ |
| Fetal liver HPCs transduced with retroviral vectors | ETV6-RUNX1 did not induce leukemia in transplanted mice. | 2004 | [ |
| Bone marrow transplantation model | No leukemia development was observed. | 2005 | [ |
| ETV6-RUNX1 expression is conditionally driven from the endogenous promoter (knock-in) | ETV6-RUNX1 renders mice prone to T-cell malignancy after chemical mutagenesis when expressed in HSCs, but not in early lymphoid progenitors. | 2009 | [ |
| Constitutive expression of ETV6-RUNX1 from the endogenous promoter | No leukemia development was observed without a genetically induced random mutagenesis approach. | 2011 | [ |
| ETV6-RUNX1 expression is driven from a CMV promoter and constitutively activated since fetal HSC stage. | No leukemia development was observed even under low-dose radiation exposure. | 2013 | [ |
| The expression of the fusion protein is restricted to CD19(+) B cells | No leukemia development was observed. | 2013 | [ |
| ETV6-RUNX1 expression is restricted to HS/PCs | Low penetrance of pB-ALL under common infection exposure. | 2017 | [ |
Figure 2The natural history of ETV6-RUNX1 pB-ALL childhood in the mouse
The Sca1-ETV6-RUNX1 mouse model restricts the oncogen expression to the HS/PCs. The pB-ALL development in this mouse model is driven by the exposure of the mice to common infections and has a low penetrance (10,75%), as in humans. This mouse model is valuable because it allows us to identify susceptible genes and understand the transformation process and hopefully to develop new prevention therapies for pB-ALL childhood leukemia.
Figure 3Parallelisms in clonal evolution of ETV6-RUNX1 preleukemic clones to pB-ALL childhoood leukemia in mouse and humans
The ETV6-RUNX1 fusion gene is linked with the most common subtype of childhood leukemia. In humans, only few ETV6-RUNX1 carriers develop pB-ALL so the essential genetic basis for development of full-blown leukemia remains to be recognized. The infective theory linked to the development of leukemia was postulated 100 years ago and has been validated experimentally in the last two years [23, 28]. Thereby, the clonal evolution of an ETV6-RUNX1 preleukemic clone to pB-ALL is a multistep process in which a preleukemic clone (ETV6-RUNX1+) is transformed only when is exposed to common infections [18]. Similar secondary genetic alterations were found in both human and mice, like the loss of function mutation in KDM5c (p.408Y>C mutation in humans and p.804R>* mutation in mice).