학술논문

SETD2 mutations do not contribute to clonal fitness in response to chemotherapy in childhood B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Document Type
Article
Source
Leukemia & Lymphoma. Jan2024, Vol. 65 Issue 1, p78-90. 13p.
Subject
*LYMPHOBLASTIC leukemia
*ACUTE leukemia
*B cells
*DNA repair
*ACUTE myeloid leukemia
*AGAMMAGLOBULINEMIA
Language
ISSN
1042-8194
Abstract
Mutations in genes encoding epigenetic regulators are commonly observed at relapse in B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Loss-of-function mutations in SETD2, an H3K36 methyltransferase, have been observed in B-ALL and other cancers. Previous studies on mutated SETD2 in solid tumors and acute myelogenous leukemia support a role in promoting resistance to DNA damaging agents. We did not observe chemoresistance, an impaired DNA damage response, nor increased mutation frequency in response to thiopurines using CRISPR-mediated knockout in wild-type B-ALL cell lines. Likewise, restoration of SETD2 in cell lines with hemizygous mutations did not increase sensitivity. SETD2 mutations affected the chromatin landscape and transcriptional output that was unique to each cell line. Collectively our data does not support a role for SETD2 mutations in driving clonal evolution and relapse in B-ALL, which is consistent with the lack of enrichment of SETD2 mutations at relapse in most studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]