NOTCH1 mutations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia with trisomy 12

2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (11) ◽  
pp. 1063-1063 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ester M Orlandi ◽  
Marianna Rossi
Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3320-3320
Author(s):  
Lesley-Ann Sutton ◽  
Emma Young ◽  
Panagiotis Baliakas ◽  
Anastasia Hadzidimitriou ◽  
Karla Plevova ◽  
...  

Abstract Preliminary observations from essentially small patient series indicate that certain recurrent gene mutations may be enriched in subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with stereotyped B-cell receptors (BcR). On these grounds, it could be argued that differential modes of immune signaling, in the context of subset-biased antigen-immunoglobulin (IG) interactions, may be associated with the acquisition and/or selection of certain genomic aberrations within various stereotyped CLL subsets. With this in mind, we here sought to explore the genetic background of 10 major stereotyped subsets which collectively account for ~11% of all CLL and represent both IGHV unmutated (U-CLL) and/or mutated (M-CLL) cases. We focused on recurrent mutations within the NOTCH1 (entire exon 34 or targeted analysis for del7544-45), TP53 (exons 4-9), SF3B1 (exons 14-16), BIRC3 (exons 6-9) and MYD88 (exon 5) genes. Overall, 647 cases were analyzed, belonging to the following major subsets: (i) U-CLL: #1 (the largest within U-CLL, clinically aggressive), n=139; #3, n=39; #5, n=22; #6, n=48; #7, n=74; #8, n=46; #59, n=19 and #99, n=18; (ii) M-CLL: #4 (the largest within M-CLL, particularly indolent), n=78; and, (iii) subset #2 (the largest overall, variable mutational status and clinically aggressive), n=164. All cases were devoid of MYD88 mutations, which was not surprising given that our cohort was predominantly composed of U-CLL. Mutations within the BIRC3 gene were either absent (#2, #4, #6 and #59) or rare (#1, #3, #5, #7, #8 and #99; frequency 1.5%-7%) with no clear bias to any subset. BIRC3-mutant cases frequently co-existed with either del(11q) or trisomy 12. NOTCH1 mutations were more frequent in subsets #1, #6, #8, #59 and #99 (frequency, 22%-32%), sharply contrasting subsets #2 or #3 (4% and 7%, respectively) (p<0.0001). Of note, although NOTCH1 mutations tended to coincide with trisomy 12 in certain subsets e.g. #1 and #8, their co-occurrence differed significantly with only 33% of NOTCH1mut subset #1 cases carrying trisomy 12 compared to 75% of NOTCH1mut subset #8 cases (p=0.036). Moving to SF3B1, we noted that subsets harboring NOTCH1 mutations were either absent for or carried few SF3B1 mutations, while the inverse was also true i.e. very high frequency of SF3B1 mutations in subsets #2 and #3, 45% and 36%, respectively. Almost 80% of mutations observed in subset #2 were localized to two codons (p.K700E: n=44/76, 58%: p.G742D: n=15/76, 20%) within the HEAT domain of the SF3B1 protein; p.K700E accounted for only 29% (4/14) of all SF3B1 mutations detected in subset #3 while p.G742D was absent (p=0.043 and p=0.068 respectively). Thus, although the functional relevance of these mutations is currently unknown, their high frequency and striking bias to subset #2 bodes strongly for their critical role in the pathobiology of subset #2. Finally, TP53 mutations were: (i) enriched in subsets #3 (11%) and #7 (19%) and, in contrast, absent or rare in subsets #5 (0%) and #6 (4%), despite all utilizing the IGHV1-69 gene (p=0.02); (ii) enriched in subset #1 (15%) and subset #99 (33%), a less populated subset that is highly similar to subset #1; and, (iii) very rare in subsets #2 and #8 (2% in both), the latter known to display the highest risk for Richter's transformation among all CLL. In conclusion, we confirm and significantly extend recent observations indicating that different CLL stereotyped subsets display distinct genetic makeup. These findings imply that distinctive modes of microenvironmental interactions, mediated by certain stereotyped BcRs, may be associated with selection or occurrence of particular genetic aberrations, with the combined effect determining both clonal and clinical evolution, and ultimately disease outcome. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 306-306
Author(s):  
Tamara Bittolo ◽  
Federico Pozzo ◽  
Riccardo Bomben ◽  
Tiziana D'Agaro ◽  
Vanessa Bravin ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), NOTCH1 mutations associate with clinical resistance to anti-CD20 immunotherapy in FCR combination (Stilgenbauer et al., Blood, 2014, Dal Bo et al., AHO, 2014), that can be ascribed to a NOTCH1 mutation-driven repression of CD20 levels by HDACs (Pozzo et al., Leukemia, 2016). Recently, novel recurrent mutations have been identified in the 3'untranslated region of NOTCH1 (3'UTR NOTCH1 mutations), determining a novel splicing event within the last NOTCH1 exon (Puente et al., Nature, 2015), leading to an impaired degradation of NOTCH1 protein. Aim. To determine if 3'UTR NOTCH1 mutations associate with low CD20 levels. Methods. NOTCH1 mutations were screened by next-generation sequencing (NGS) in exon 34 and part of 3'UTR with at least 1000X coverage. NOTCH1 (transmembrane, TM, or intracytoplasmic domain, NICD) protein levels were investigated by western blot (WB). CD20 expression was investigated by flow cytometry with a FITC-conjugated anti-CD20 antibody (L27 clone). MS4A1 (encoding for CD20 protein) transcript levels were investigated by qRT-PCR. Susceptibility to anti-CD20 rituximab and ofatumumab was investigated by complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) assay. NOTCH1 signaling was inhibited by gamma-secretase inhibitor (GSI). Results. i) NOTCH1 mutational screening. In 649 CLL, NOTCH1 mutations were detected in 115 cases (17.72%), overall accounting for 127 mutations (73 c.7541-7542delCT, 11 other frameshift, 17 nonsense, 1 missense, and 25 3'UTR mutations). For analysis purposes, the 115 mutated cases were subdivided in cases with NOTCH1 coding mutations (coding NOTCH1-mut, 90 cases) and cases with 3'UTR NOTCH1 mutations (3'UTR NOTCH1-mut, 25 cases). Four cases with concomitant 3'UTR NOTCH1 mutation and coding NOTCH1 mutation were assigned to the 3'UTR group according to the substantially higher mutational burden detected for the 3'UTR mutation. ii)NOTCH1protein expression. In keeping with alternative splicing events causing an impaired NOTCH1 protein degradation, 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases showed higher levels than NOTCH1 wild-type (NOTCH1-wt) cases of both NOTCH1 TM and NICD by WB, and similar to coding NOTCH1-mut cases (Fig. 1a). iii) CD20 expression levels. According to FISH classification, variable CD20 levels were found by flow cytometry, with the highest levels in trisomy 12 CLL. Of note, 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases expressed lower CD20 levels than NOTCH1-wt cases in both trisomy 12 CLL (mean MFI in 9 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases = 2446.11 vs mean MFI in 66 NOTCH1-wt cases = 8254.20; p<0.0001) and non-trisomy 12 CLL (mean MFI in 16 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases = 2033.50 vs. mean MFI in 468 NOTCH1-wt cases = 3294.07; p=0.0001), and comparable to coding NOTCH1-mut cases (trisomy 12 CLL, mean MFI in 34 coding NOTCH1-mut cases = 2570.73; p=0.8530; non-trisomy 12 CLL, mean MFI in 56 coding NOTCH1-mut cases = 2538.13; p=0.1500) (Fig. 1b). Similarly, in both trisomy 12 CLL and non-trisomy 12 CLL categories, MS4A1 transcript levels were lower in 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases than in NOTCH1-wt cases (p=0.0274 and p=0.0072, respectively), again with expression levels comparable with coding NOTCH1-mut cases (p=0.2874 and p=0.9610, respectively, Fig. 1c). iv) Susceptibility to anti-CD20 in vitro. In keeping with CD20 levels, 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases showed lower relative lysis induced by rituximab or ofatumumab, in CDC assay, than NOTCH1-wt cells (7 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases, 9 NOTCH1-wt cases; mean relative lysis upon rituximab: 2.67% vs. 25.56%; p=0.0349; mean relative lysis upon ofatumumab: 39.26% vs. 60.64%; p=0.0286). In the same manner, coding NOTCH1-mut cases showed lower relative lysis induced by rituximab or ofatumumab than NOTCH1-wt cases (9 coding NOTCH1-mut cases, 9 NOTCH1-wt cases; mean relative lysis upon rituximab: 2.53% vs. 25.56%; p=0.0339; mean relative lysis upon ofatumumab: 30.60% vs. 60.64%; p=0.0114; Fig. 1d). v) Modulation of CD20 expression by NOTCH1 inhibition. GSI treatment increased both CD20 protein and transcript levels in 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases, as previously reported for coding NOTCH1-mut cases (p=0.0376 and p=0.0326, respectively; Fig. 1e,Pozzo et al., Leukemia, 2016). Conclusions.In keeping with an impaired NOTCH1 protein degradation, 3'UTR NOTCH1-mut cases had low CD20 expression levels, suggesting the introduction of 3'UTR NOTCH1 mutation evaluation in CLL patients undergoing anti-CD20 immuno-chemotherapy. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1978-1978
Author(s):  
Antonella Zucchetto ◽  
Chiara Caldana ◽  
Federico Pozzo ◽  
Silvia Rasi ◽  
Carmela Ciardullo ◽  
...  

Abstract Mutations of NOTCH1 have emerged as one of the most frequent somatic alterations in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), affecting up to 10–15% of patients. These mutations (~80% are 7544-7545delCT frameshift deletions) generate a truncated protein that accumulates in the cell and activates the downstream NOTCH1 signaling which is implicated in apoptosis resistance and increased survival of CLL cells. CD49d (α4 integrin chain) is one of the most relevant negative prognosticator in CLL, expressed by ~40% of CLL cases, and associated with aggressive/accelerated clinical courses, whose key role in CLL cell microenvironmental interactions has been thoroughly investigated. Literature data indicate that NOTCH1 has a role in activating the integrin signaling in several cell models. Given the higher CD49d expression characterizing trisomy 12 CLL, a CLL subset in which the NOTCH1 pathway is more often activated by NOTCH1 mutations, this study was aimed at investigating the contribution of NOTCH1 in the regulation of CD49d expression in CLL. The 7544-7545delCT NOTCH1 mutations were investigated by ARMS-PCR in 1027 CLL cases, all characterized for CD49d expression and for the cytogenetic profiles by FISH. NOTCH1 mutated cases were 158/1027 (15%), with a higher prevalence (36.7% of NOTCH1 mutated cases) in the trisomy 12 cytogenetic group. Analysis of CD49d expression highlighted a very strong association between the presence of NOTCH1 mutations and CD49d expression (p<0.0001). In particular, high CD49d expression (>30% of positive cells) was found in 102/158 (64.5%) NOTCH1 mutated cases as compared to 285/869 (32.8%) NOTCH1 wild-type cases. Of note, excluding trisomy 12 CLL, again NOTCH1 mutated CLL (100/865, 11.6%) displayed a significantly higher frequency of CD49d+ cases (52%) as compared to NOTCH1 wild-type CLL (25.7%) (p<0.0001). We next analyzed the percentage of mutated NOTCH1 DNA in the context of the CLL clone by a quantitative real-time PCR (QRT-PCR) approach set up by us to quantify the delCT NOTCH1 mutation. Using the 10% cut-off value to discriminate between cases with high (high NOTCH1) and low (low NOTCH1) mutation burden, 90/138 (67.7%) and 43/138 (32.3%) CLL cases were classified as low NOTCH1 and high NOTCH1, respectively. A higher prevalence of CD49d+ cases was found in the high NOTCH1 group (79%) as compared to the low NOTCH1 group (58%) (p=0.03). Moreover, a significant association between CD49d expression and a high NOTCH1 mutation burden was observed also excluding trisomy 12 CLL, with 69% of CD49d+ cases in the high NOTCH1 group, compared to 41% of CD49d+cases in the low NOTCH1 group (p=0.03). The association between NOTCH1 mutations and CD49d expression was next confirmed by next-generation sequencing results using the flow cytometrically sorted (>99% purity) CD49d- and CD49d+ components from 8 CLL cases characterized by both CD49d bimodal expression, and the presence of 7544-7545delCT NOTCH1 mutations at the subclonal level. In 7/8 cases, the CD49d+ component showed a higher NOTCH1 mutation burden compared to the CD49d- component, this difference reaching statistical significance in 4/7 cases. Of note, a similar clustering of mutations could not be observed in the CD49d- and CD49d+ components of other CLL cases characterized by bimodal CD49d expression and subclonal mutations of SF3B1 (n=1), BIRC3 (n=2) or TP53 (n=2). To verify whether NOTCH1 accumulation, as occurring in NOTCH1 mutated CLL, may influence CD49d expression, MEC-1 cells were transfected with a vector containing either a NOTCH1 intracellular domain (NICD) with 7544-7545delCT or a NICD carrying a missense mutation (c.5304G>A) generating a stop codon at the beginning of the sequence, as control. The higher levels of both NOTCH1 transcript (fold increase over control=2.2) and protein (fold increase over control=1.3) characterizing mutated-NICD MEC-1 cells, was paralleled by higher levels of CD49d expression (mean fluorescence intensity=23.300 versus 12.400) in these cells. Altogether our data demonstrate a direct correlation between NOTCH1 mutations and CD49d expression also outside the trisomy 12 CLL group, and suggest that accumulation of NOTCH1 may be directly or indirectly responsible for the up-regulation of CD49d expression. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 283-283
Author(s):  
Davide Rossi ◽  
Silvia Rasi ◽  
Giulia Fabbri ◽  
Valeria Spina ◽  
Marco Fangazio ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 283 The clinical course of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) ranges from very indolent, with a nearly normal life expectancy, to rapidly progressive leading to death and occasionally undergoing transformation to Richter syndrome (RS). TP53 disruption identifies a fraction of high risk CLL destined to experience a very short survival. High risk CLL, however, cannot be fully recapitulated by TP53 disruption and other lesions of cancer genes may be implicated in this aggressive phenotype. Analysis of the CLL coding genome has recently disclosed that the NOTCH1 proto-oncogene is recurrently mutated at CLL presentation. Here we assessed the prognostic role of NOTCH1 mutations in CLL. Two series of previously untreated CLL were utilized as training (n=309, median follow-up 6 years) and validation (n=230, median follow-up 7 years) cohorts. NOTCH1 mutations were analyzed by DNA Sanger sequencing in blind with respect to clinical data. In the training series, NOTCH1 mutations occurred in 34/309 (11.0%) patients, being mostly represented (26/34, 76.5%) by a recurrent two bp frameshift deletion (c.7544_7545delCT). The remaining NOTCH1 mutations (8/34, 23.5%) were frameshift deletions other than c.7544_7545delCT (n=7) and frameshift insertions (n=1). All mutations were predicted to disrupt the NOTCH1 PEST domain. CLL with NOTCH1 mutations preferentially carried unmutated IGHV genes (76.5%, p<.001). Other characteristics at presentation associated with NOTCH1 mutations were advanced Rai stage (26.5%, p=.006) and trisomy 12 (44.1%, p<.001). By univariate analysis, NOTCH1 mutations associated with an increase in the hazard of death (HR: 3.77; 95% CI: 2.14–6.66) and a significant overall survival OS shortening (p<.001) (Fig. 1A). Multivariate analysis selected NOTCH1 mutations as an independent risk factor of OS (HR: 4.22; 95% CI: 2.15–8.28; p<.001), after adjusting for age (p<.001), Rai stage (p=.005), IGHV mutation status (p=.465), 11q22-q23 deletion (p=.128), trisomy 12 (p=.183) and TP53 disruption (p<.001). The poor prognosis conferred by NOTCH1 mutations was attributable, at least in part, to a shorter time to progression requiring treatment (p<.001), and a higher cumulative probability of RS development (p=.026). Although NOTCH1 mutated patients were devoid of TP53 disruption in 31/34 (91.2%) cases, the OS predicted by NOTCH1 mutations was similar to that of TP53 mutated/deleted CLL (Fig. 1C). Analysis of the validation series confirmed: i) the prevalence of NOTCH1 mutations at CLL presentation (26/230, 11.3%); ii) the spectrum of NOTCH1 mutations at CLL presentation (c.7544_7545delCT: 21/26, 80.7%; other mutations: 5/26, 19.3%) iii) the adverse prognostic impact of NOTCH1 mutations in CLL both by univariate analysis (Fig. 1B) and by multivariate analysis (HR: 2.08; 95% CI: 1.10–3.93; p=.023); iv) the preferential mutually exclusive distribution of NOTCH1 mutations and TP53 disruption (25/26, 96.2%); v) that OS of NOTCH1 mutated CLL is similarly poor as that of TP53 disrupted CLL (Fig. 1D). The current study on 539 CLL documents that NOTCH1 mutations: i) represent one of the most frequent cancer gene mutations known to be involved at CLL presentation; ii) identify a subgroup of patients showing poor OS similar to that of TP53 disrupted cases; iii) exert a prognostic role independent of widely accepted clinical and genetic risk factors; iv) predict OS in series from different institutions, as documented by the training-validation approach chosen for the design of this study. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (11) ◽  
pp. 1064-1065
Author(s):  
Cristina López ◽  
Julio Delgado ◽  
Dolors Costa ◽  
Laura Conde ◽  
Gabriela Ghita ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (9) ◽  
pp. 881-889 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina López ◽  
Julio Delgado ◽  
Dolors Costa ◽  
Laura Conde ◽  
Gabriela Ghita ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 329-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronica Balatti ◽  
Arianna Bottoni ◽  
Alexey Palamarchuk ◽  
Hansjuerg Alder ◽  
Laura Z. Rassenti ◽  
...  

Abstract Two recent studies reported wholegenome sequencing of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) samples and found repeated mutations in the XPO1 and NOTCH1 genes. XPO1 was found mutated in 2.4% of cases, while NOTCH1 was found mutated in 12.2% or 15.1% of CLL samples. Here we report the results of sequencing of XPO1 and NOTCH1 in 186 CLL cases. Our results confirmed frequency of XPO1 mutations. However, we found only 5 NOTCH1 mutations in 127 IGVH unmutated/ZAP70+ CLL samples (4%), and one mutation was found in IGVH mutated/ZAP70− CLL for a total percentage of 1.5%. Because 4 of 6 mutated samples also showed trisomy 12, we sequenced NOTCH1 in an additional 77 cases with trisomy 12 CLLs, including 47 IGVH unmutated/ZAP70+ cases. Importantly, we found 41.9% NOTCH1 mutation frequency in aggressive trisomy 12 CLL cases. Our data suggest that activation of NOTCH1 plays a critical role in IGVH unmutated/ZAP70+ trisomy 12 CLL.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 123 (26) ◽  
pp. 4101-4110 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Riches ◽  
Conor J. O’Donovan ◽  
Sarah J. Kingdon ◽  
Fabienne McClanahan ◽  
Andrew J. Clear ◽  
...  

Key Points Trisomy 12 CLL cells exhibit upregulated integrin signaling and enhanced VLA-4-directed adhesion and motility. The increased expression of β2-integrins on trisomy 12 CLL cells is modulated by intercurrent NOTCH1 mutations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 261-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Tari ◽  
Z Shamsi ◽  
H Reza Ghafari ◽  
A Atashi ◽  
M Shahjahani ◽  
...  

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is increased proliferation of B-cells with peripheral blood and bone marrow involvement, which is usually observed in older people. Genetic mutations, epigenetic changes and miRs play a role in CLL pathogenesis. Del 11q, del l17q, del 6q, trisomy 12, p53 and IgVH mutations are the most important genetic changes in CLL. Deletion of miR-15a and miR-16a can increase bcl2 gene expression, miR-29 and miR-181 deletions decrease the expression of TCL1, and miR-146a deletion prevents tumor metastasis. Epigenetic changes such as hypo- and hypermethylation, ubiquitination, hypo- and hyperacetylation of gene promoters involved in CLL pathogenesis can also play a role in CLL. Expression of CD38 and ZAP70, presence or absence of mutation in IgVH and P53 mutation are among the factors involved in CLL prognosis. Use of monoclonal antibodies against surface markers of B-cells like anti-CD20 as well as tyrosine kinase inhibitors are the most important therapeutic approaches for CLL.


2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (8) ◽  
pp. 657-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrien Cosson ◽  
Elise Chapiro ◽  
Nabila Belhouachi ◽  
Hong-Anh Cung ◽  
Boris Keren ◽  
...  

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