| Literature DB >> 29437595 |
Norihiro Murakami1, Yusuke Okuno2, Kenichi Yoshida3, Yuichi Shiraishi4, Genta Nagae5, Kyogo Suzuki1, Atsushi Narita1, Hirotoshi Sakaguchi6, Nozomu Kawashima1, Xinan Wang1, Yinyan Xu1, Kenichi Chiba4, Hiroko Tanaka4, Asahito Hama1, Masashi Sanada3,7, Masafumi Ito8, Masashi Hirayama9, Arata Watanabe9, Toshihide Ueno10, Seiji Kojima1, Hiroyuki Aburatani5, Hiroyuki Mano10, Satoru Miyano4,11, Seishi Ogawa3, Yoshiyuki Takahashi1, Hideki Muramatsu1.
Abstract
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML), a rare and aggressive myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasm that occurs in infants and during early childhood, is characterized by excessive myelomonocytic cell proliferation. More than 80% of patients harbor germ line and somatic mutations in RAS pathway genes (eg, PTPN11, NF1, NRAS, KRAS, and CBL), and previous studies have identified several biomarkers associated with poor prognosis. However, the molecular pathogenesis of 10% to 20% of patients and the relationships among these biomarkers have not been well defined. To address these issues, we performed an integrated molecular analysis of samples from 150 JMML patients. RNA-sequencing identified ALK/ROS1 tyrosine kinase fusions (DCTN1-ALK, RANBP2-ALK, and TBL1XR1-ROS1) in 3 of 16 patients (18%) who lacked canonical RAS pathway mutations. Crizotinib, an ALK/ROS1 inhibitor, markedly suppressed ALK/ROS1 fusion-positive JMML cell proliferation in vitro. Therefore, we administered crizotinib to a chemotherapy-resistant patient with the RANBP2-ALK fusion who subsequently achieved complete molecular remission. In addition, crizotinib also suppressed proliferation of JMML cells with canonical RAS pathway mutations. Genome-wide methylation analysis identified a hypermethylation profile resembling that of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which correlated significantly with genetic markers with poor outcomes such as PTPN11/NF1 gene mutations, 2 or more genetic mutations, an AML-type expression profile, and LIN28B expression. In summary, we identified recurrent activated ALK/ROS1 fusions in JMML patients without canonical RAS pathway gene mutations and revealed the relationships among biomarkers for JMML. Crizotinib is a promising candidate drug for the treatment of JMML, particularly in patients with ALK/ROS1 fusions.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29437595 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-07-798157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113