| Literature DB >> 34283887 |
Elena Tonc1, Yoshiko Takeuchi1, Chun Chou1, Yu Xia1, Melanie Holmgren1, Chika Fujii1, Saravanan Raju1, Gue Su Chang2, Masahiro Iwamoto3, Takeshi Egawa1.
Abstract
The proliferative burst of B lymphocytes is essential for antigen receptor repertoire diversification during the development and selective expansion of antigen-specific clones during immune responses. High proliferative activity inevitably promotes oncogenesis, the risk of which is further elevated in B lymphocytes by endogenous gene rearrangement and somatic mutations. However, B-cell-derived cancers are rare, perhaps owing to putative intrinsic tumor-suppressive mechanisms. We show that c-MYC facilitates B-cell proliferation as a protumorigenic driver and unexpectedly coengages counteracting tumor suppression through its downstream factor TFAP4. TFAP4 is mutated in human lymphoid malignancies, particularly in >10% of Burkitt lymphomas, and reduced TFAP4 expression was associated with poor survival of patients with MYC-high B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In mice, insufficient TFAP4 expression accelerated c-MYC-driven transformation of B cells. Mechanistically, c-MYC suppresses the stemness of developing B cells by inducing TFAP4 and restricting self-renewal of proliferating B cells. Thus, the pursuant transcription factor cascade functions as a tumor suppressor module that safeguards against the transformation of developing B cells.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34283887 PMCID: PMC8678995 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021011711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476