학술논문

Comprehensive mutational analysis of primary and relapse acute promyelocytic leukemia
Document Type
article
Source
Leukemia. 30(8)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
Human Genome
Childhood Leukemia
Pediatric Cancer
Genetics
Rare Diseases
Hematology
Clinical Research
Pediatric
Cell Differentiation
DNA Mutational Analysis
DNA-Binding Proteins
Exome
Gene Expression Profiling
Humans
Leukemia
Promyelocytic
Acute
Nuclear Proteins
Recurrence
Transcription Factors
Immunology
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Clinical sciences
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is a subtype of myeloid leukemia characterized by differentiation block at the promyelocyte stage. Besides the presence of chromosomal rearrangement t(15;17), leading to the formation of PML-RARA (promyelocytic leukemia-retinoic acid receptor alpha) fusion, other genetic alterations have also been implicated in APL. Here, we performed comprehensive mutational analysis of primary and relapse APL to identify somatic alterations, which cooperate with PML-RARA in the pathogenesis of APL. We explored the mutational landscape using whole-exome (n=12) and subsequent targeted sequencing of 398 genes in 153 primary and 69 relapse APL. Both primary and relapse APL harbored an average of eight non-silent somatic mutations per exome. We observed recurrent alterations of FLT3, WT1, NRAS and KRAS in the newly diagnosed APL, whereas mutations in other genes commonly mutated in myeloid leukemia were rarely detected. The molecular signature of APL relapse was characterized by emergence of frequent mutations in PML and RARA genes. Our sequencing data also demonstrates incidence of loss-of-function mutations in previously unidentified genes, ARID1B and ARID1A, both of which encode for key components of the SWI/SNF complex. We show that knockdown of ARID1B in APL cell line, NB4, results in large-scale activation of gene expression and reduced in vitro differentiation potential.