scholarly journals Genomic instability is a principle pathologic feature of FLT3 ITD kinase activity in acute myeloid leukemia leading to clonal evolution and disease progression

2017 ◽  
Vol 58 (9) ◽  
pp. 2040-2050 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie T. Rebechi ◽  
Keith W. Pratz
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Récher

Recent advances in the description of the tumor microenvironment of acute myeloid leukemia, including the comprehensive analysis of the leukemic stem cell niche and clonal evolution, indicate that inflammation may play a major role in many aspects of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) such as disease progression, chemoresistance, and myelosuppression. Studies on the mechanisms of resistance to chemotherapy or tyrosine kinase inhibitors along with high-throughput drug screening have underpinned the potential role of glucocorticoids in this disease classically described as steroid-resistant in contrast to acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Moreover, some mutated oncogenes such as RUNX1, NPM1, or SRSF2 transcriptionally modulate cell state in a manner that primes leukemic cells for glucocorticoid sensitivity. In clinical practice, inflammatory markers such as serum ferritin or IL-6 have a strong prognostic impact and may directly affect disease progression, whereas interesting preliminary data suggested that dexamethasone may improve the outcome for AML patients with a high white blood cell count, which paves the way to develop prospective clinical trials that evaluate the role of glucocorticoids in AML.


Author(s):  
Deepshi Thakral ◽  
Ritu Gupta ◽  
Ranjit Kumar Sahoo ◽  
Pramod Verma ◽  
Indresh Kumar ◽  
...  

The clonal evolution of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an oligoclonal hematological malignancy, is driven by a plethora of cytogenetic abnormalities, gene mutations, abnormal epigenetic patterns, and aberrant gene expressions. These alterations in the leukemic blasts promote clinically diverse manifestations with common characteristics of high relapse and drug resistance. Defining and real-time monitoring of a personalized panel of these predictive genetic biomarkers is rapidly being adapted in clinical setting for diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic decision-making in AML. A major challenge remains the frequency of invasive biopsy procedures that can be routinely performed for monitoring of AML disease progression. Moreover, a single-site biopsy is not representative of the tumor heterogeneity as it is spatially and temporally constrained and necessitates the understanding of longitudinal and spatial subclonal dynamics in AML. Hematopoietic cells are a major contributor to plasma cell-free DNA, which also contain leukemia-specific aberrations as the circulating tumor-derived DNA (ctDNA) fraction. Plasma cell-free DNA analysis holds immense potential as a minimally invasive tool for genomic profiling at diagnosis as well as clonal evolution during AML disease progression. With the technological advances and increasing sensitivity for detection of ctDNA, both genetic and epigenetic aberrations can be qualitatively and quantitatively evaluated. However, challenges remain in validating the utility of liquid biopsy tools in clinics, and universal recommendations are still awaited towards reliable diagnostics and prognostics. Here, we provide an overview on the scope of ctDNA analyses for prognosis, assessment of response to treatment and measurable residual disease, prediction of disease relapse, development of acquired resistance and beyond in AML.


2021 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 106494
Author(s):  
Diego Adrianzen-Herrera ◽  
Ximena Jordan-Bruno ◽  
Katherine A. Devitt ◽  
Joanna L. Conant ◽  
Juli-Anne Gardner

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusuke Tarumoto ◽  
Shan Lin ◽  
Jinhua Wang ◽  
Joseph P. Milazzo ◽  
Yali Xu ◽  
...  

AbstractLineage-defining transcription factors (TFs) are compelling targets for leukemia therapy, yet they are among the most challenging proteins to modulate directly with small molecules. We previously used CRISPR screening to identify a Salt-Inducible Kinase 3 (SIK3) requirement for the growth of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cell lines that overexpress the lineage TF MEF2C. In this context, SIK3 maintains MEF2C function by directly phosphorylating histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4), a repressive cofactor of MEF2C. Here, we evaluated whether inhibition of SIK3 with the tool compound YKL-05-099 can suppress MEF2C function and attenuate disease progression in animal models of AML. Genetic targeting of SIK3 or MEF2C selectively suppressed the growth of transformed hematopoietic cells underin vitroandin vivoconditions. Similar phenotypes were obtained when exposing cells to YKL-05-099, which caused cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in MEF2C-expressing AML cell lines. An epigenomic analysis revealed that YKL-05-099 rapidly suppressed MEF2C function by altering the phosphorylation state and nuclear localization of HDAC4. Using a gatekeeper allele ofSIK3, we found that the anti-proliferative effects of YKL-05-099 occurred through on-target inhibition of SIK3 kinase activity. Based on these findings, we treated two different mouse models of MLL-AF9 AML with YKL-05-099, which attenuated disease progressionin vivoand extended animal survival at well-tolerated doses. These findings validate SIK3 as a therapeutic target in MEF2C-positive AML and provide a rationale for developing drug-like inhibitors of SIK3 for definitive pre-clinical investigation and for studies in human patients with leukemia.Key PointsAML cells are uniquely sensitive to genetic or chemical inhibition of Salt-Inducible Kinase 3in vitroandin vivo.A SIK inhibitor YKL-05-099 suppresses MEF2C function and AMLin vivo.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4-4
Author(s):  
Ashley Zhang ◽  
Yuntao Liu ◽  
Shuning Wei ◽  
Benfa Gong ◽  
Chunlin Zhou ◽  
...  

Background BCOR gene is a transcription repressor that may influence normal hematopoiesis and is associated with poor prognosis in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with normal karyotype. However, due to the rare mutation frequency in AML (3.8%-5%), clinical characteristics and prognosis of AML patients with BCOR mutation including abnormal karyotype are still unknown. In addition, the clonal evolution of AML patients with BCOR mutation has not been fully investigated. Methods By means of next generation of sequencing, we performed sequencing of 114 genes related to hematological diseases including BCOR on 509 newly diagnosed AML patients (except for acute promyelocytic leukemia) from March 2017 to April 2019. The 2017 European Leukemia Net (ELN) genetic risk stratification was used to evaluate prognosis. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time from diagnosis to death or last follow-up. Relapse-free survival (RFS) was measured from remission to relapse or death. Clonal evolution was investigated through analyzing bone marrow samples at diagnosis, complete remission (CR) and relapse from the same patient. Result Among 509 AML patients, we found BCOR mutations in 23 patients (4.5%). BCOR mutations were enriched in patients with mutations of RUNX1 (p = 0.008) and BCORL1 (p = 0.0003). Patients with BCOR mutation were more at adverse ELN risk category compared to patients without BCOR mutation (p = 0.007). Besides, there was a larger proportion of patients with normal karyotype in BCOR mutation group but it had not reached statistical difference (62.5% vs 45.5%, p = 0.064). The abnormal karyotype in patients with BCOR mutations included trisomy 8, t(9;11), inv(3), -7 and complex karyotype.There were no significant differences in age, sex, white blood cell count, hemoglobin or platelet count between the two groups. More patients died during induction (13.0% vs 3.5%, p = 0.56) and fewer patients achieved CR after 2 cycles of chemotherapy when patients had BCOR mutations (69.6% vs 82.5%, p = 0.115) but the difference had not reached statistical difference . Patients with BCOR mutations had inferior 2-year OS (52.1% vs 70.7%, p = 0.0094) and 2-year RFS (29.8% vs 61.1%, p = 0.0090). After adjustment for ELN risk stratification, BCOR mutation was still remain a poor prognostic factor. However, the adverse prognostic impact of BCOR mutation is overcome by hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), in which there was no difference between BCOR mutation group and wild type group (p = 0.474) (Figure 1). Through analysis of paired bone marrow sample at diagnosis, remission and relapse, we revealed the clonal evolution that BCOR mutation was only detected at diagnosis sample as a subclone and diminished at CR and relapse while TP53 mutation was only detected at relapse with a variant allele frequency (VAF) of 25.5%. We also found BCOR mutation at another patient's diagnosis and relapse sample while TP53 mutation was detected at relapse with VAF of 11.8%. Conclusion BCOR is associated with RUNX1 mutation and higher ELN risk. AML patients with BCOR mutation including normal and abnormal karyotype conferred a worse impact on OS that can be overcome by HSCT. BCOR mutation is a subclone at diagnosis or relapse in some patients, in which TP53 mutation clone occurred at relapse. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sibylle Cocciardi ◽  
Anna Dolnik ◽  
Silke Kapp-Schwoerer ◽  
Frank G. Rücker ◽  
Susanne Lux ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 402-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Volkert ◽  
Alexander Kohlmann ◽  
Susanne Schnittger ◽  
Wolfgang Kern ◽  
Torsten Haferlach ◽  
...  

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