| Literature DB >> 29795382 |
Jacqueline Lehmann-Che1,2,3,4, Cécile Bally3,5, Eric Letouzé3,6,7,8, Caroline Berthier1,2,3,9, Hao Yuan1,2,3, Florence Jollivet1,2,3, Lionel Ades3,5, Bruno Cassinat10, Pierre Hirsch11,12, Arnaud Pigneux13, Marie-Joelle Mozziconacci14, Scott Kogan15, Pierre Fenaux3,5, Hugues de Thé16,17,18,19,20.
Abstract
Retinoic acid (RA) and arsenic target the t(15;17)(q24;q21) PML/RARA driver of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), their combination now curing over 95% patients. We report exome sequencing of 64 matched samples collected from patients at initial diagnosis, during remission, and following relapse after historical combined RA-chemotherapy treatments. A first subgroup presents a high incidence of additional oncogenic mutations disrupting key epigenetic or transcriptional regulators (primarily WT1) or activating MAPK signaling at diagnosis. Relapses retain these cooperating oncogenes and exhibit additional oncogenic alterations and/or mutations impeding therapy response (RARA, NT5C2). The second group primarily exhibits FLT3 activation at diagnosis, which is lost upon relapse together with most other passenger mutations, implying that these relapses derive from ancestral pre-leukemic PML/RARA-expressing cells that survived RA/chemotherapy. Accordingly, clonogenic activity of PML/RARA-immortalized progenitors ex vivo is only transiently affected by RA, but selectively abrogated by arsenic. Our studies stress the role of cooperating oncogenes in direct relapses and suggest that targeting pre-leukemic cells by arsenic contributes to its clinical efficacy.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29795382 PMCID: PMC5967331 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04384-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Graphic summary of the exome analysis of relapsing APLs. a Number and type of somatic alterations identified at diagnosis (upper part) and acquired at relapse (lower part) for each patient. ND* indicates sample pairs with no available remission germline DNA, precluding determination of diagnostic alterations. b Somatic mutations (left) and copy-number alterations (right) observed at diagnosis (upper part) or relapse (lower part) at least twice in the study. Note the unexpected high prevalence and molecular variety of WT1 alterations
Fig. 2Tumor progression trees reconstructed for 18 patients with matched primary tumor and relapse samples. For each patient, a diagram represents the predicted evolution linking the cell of origin (white circle), the PML/RARA-expressing common ancestor (light blue circle), the diagnostic sample (dark blue circle), and the relapse sample (green circle). The number of somatic protein-coding mutations occurring at each step is indicated below the arrows, together with the type of PML/RARA breakpoint, chromosomal gains (red), and deletions (blue), and mutations affecting known driver genes or new recurrent genes identified in this study. The size of arrows is proportional to the number of somatic mutations occurring at diagnosis or relapses. Three major modes of evolution are identified. a Nine patients present a linear evolution where all events detected at diagnosis are also present at relapse, with (P5, P7, P8, P15, P24, P25, P26) or without (P17, P31) new acquired alterations. b Four patients display branched evolution with many alterations shared by the primary and relapse samples but also specific to one or the other, suggesting that the relapse evolved from a sub-clone of the primary tumor. c Five patients displayed no or very few alterations apart from the PML-RARA fusion in the relapse samples, suggesting that they emerged from pre-leukemic PML/RARA-expressing clones
Fig. 3Effect of therapies on self-renewal of RARA- or PML/RARA-transformed progenitors. a Mouse primary progenitors were immortalized by RARA overexpression and propagated in methylcellulose cultures with the indicated treatments. Treated cells were then regrown without further drug exposure. Colony numbers and MGG stains are shown. Scale bar: 10μm. b Same as above with PML/RARA-transformed progenitors. Representative experiment of three independent replicates. c Effect of RA therapy on the abundance of pre-leukemic PML/RARA-expressing cells in vivo. Relative PML/RARA DNA abundance, as determined by qPCR comparing PML/RARA and CEBPA abundance, is indicated for each mouse before and after therapy. Treatment did not result in significant difference in PML/RARA abundance, as demonstrated by paired Student's t-test The mouse images in this figure were drawn by Dr. Lehmann-Che for use in this paper