scholarly journals Human myeloperoxidase gene expression in acute leukemia

Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 74 (6) ◽  
pp. 2096-2102 ◽  
Author(s):  
SR Zaki ◽  
GE Austin ◽  
D Swan ◽  
A Srinivasan ◽  
AH Ragab ◽  
...  

Abstract To evaluate the relationship between myeloperoxidase (MPO) gene expression and specific lineages of hematopoietic differentiation, we analyzed expression of the MPO gene in a variety of normal and leukemic human cells. As a first step, we synthesized several oligonucleotide probes and isolated cDNA clones for the MPO gene. MPO expression was detected in most acute myeloid leukemias, and the level of expression correlated well with cytochemical enzymatic activity. No MPO message was detected in pure lymphoid leukemias, whereas very low basal levels of MPO transcripts were found in normal bone marrows. In four cases of acute undifferentiated leukemias cytochemically negative for MPO, significant levels of MPO transcripts were detected, suggesting a myeloid origin for these cases. These results indicate that MPO gene expression may serve as an additional marker for subclassification of acute leukemias and may be used to identify leukemic cells arrested at an early stage of the myeloid differentiation pathway.

Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 74 (6) ◽  
pp. 2096-2102
Author(s):  
SR Zaki ◽  
GE Austin ◽  
D Swan ◽  
A Srinivasan ◽  
AH Ragab ◽  
...  

To evaluate the relationship between myeloperoxidase (MPO) gene expression and specific lineages of hematopoietic differentiation, we analyzed expression of the MPO gene in a variety of normal and leukemic human cells. As a first step, we synthesized several oligonucleotide probes and isolated cDNA clones for the MPO gene. MPO expression was detected in most acute myeloid leukemias, and the level of expression correlated well with cytochemical enzymatic activity. No MPO message was detected in pure lymphoid leukemias, whereas very low basal levels of MPO transcripts were found in normal bone marrows. In four cases of acute undifferentiated leukemias cytochemically negative for MPO, significant levels of MPO transcripts were detected, suggesting a myeloid origin for these cases. These results indicate that MPO gene expression may serve as an additional marker for subclassification of acute leukemias and may be used to identify leukemic cells arrested at an early stage of the myeloid differentiation pathway.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guanying Gao ◽  
Ruiqi Wu ◽  
Rongge Liu ◽  
Jianquan Wang ◽  
Yingfang Ao ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Recent studies have shown high expression levels of certain inflammatory, anabolic, and catabolic genes in the articular cartilage from the impingement zone of the hips with femoroacetabular impingement (FAI), representing an increased metabolic state. Nevertheless, little is known about the molecular properties of bone tissue from the impingement zone of hips with FAI. Methods Bone tissue samples from patients with early-stage cam-type FAI were collected during hip arthroscopy for treatment of cam-type FAI. Control bone tissue samples were collected from six patients who underwent total hip replacement because of a femoral neck fracture. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to determine the gene expression associated with inflammation and bone remodeling. The differences in the gene expression in bone tissues from the patients with early-stage cam-type FAI were also evaluated based on clinical parameters. Results In all, 12 patients with early-stage cam-type FAI and six patients in the control group were included in this study. Compared to the control samples, the bone tissue samples from patients with FAI showed higher expression levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand (RANKL), and osteoprotegerin (OPG) (P < 0.05). IL-1 expression was detected only in the control group. On the other hand, there was no significant difference in IL-8 expression between the patients with FAI and the control group. The patients with FAI having a body mass index (BMI) of >24 kg/m2 showed higher ALP expression (P < 0.05). Further, the expression of IL-6 and ALP was higher in the patients with FAI in whom the lateral center-edge angle was >30° (P < 0.05). Conclusions Our results indicated the metabolic condition of bone tissues in patients with early-stage cam-type FAI differed from that of normal bone in the femoral head-neck junction. The expression levels of the genes associated with inflammation and bone remodeling were higher in the bone tissue of patients with early-stage cam-type FAI than in the patients with normal bone tissue.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (8) ◽  
pp. 2066-2073 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Lubbert ◽  
W Oster ◽  
WD Ludwig ◽  
A Ganser ◽  
R Mertelsmann ◽  
...  

Abstract Expression of numerous genes encoding myeloid-specific proteins is tightly regulated during normal myeloid differentiation. This heterogeneous group of genes thus offers a tool for dissection of different maturational steps of myelopoiesis. We have previously shown that the human myeloperoxidase (MPO) gene is modified at numerous CpG residues in normal myeloid cells and in myeloid cell lines in a development-specific and expression-associated manner. In the present work, we have applied this type of methylation analysis to primary leukemia myeloid cell samples. We found that expression of MPO messenger RNA (mRNA) is grossly limited to leukemias of late myeloblastic and promyelocytic stages; expression is thus associated with progressive demethylation in the 5′ region of the MPO gene. This modification was not global. Low-level induction of MPO mRNA expression in very immature leukemic cells using phorbol ester was not accompanied by progressive demethylation. This type of methylation analysis of a myeloid-specific gene may yield a molecular indicator for different types of myeloid leukemias.


Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 262-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adolfo A. Ferrando ◽  
Scott A. Armstrong ◽  
Donna S. Neuberg ◽  
Stephen E. Sallan ◽  
Lewis B. Silverman ◽  
...  

Abstract Rearrangements of the MLL locus, located on human chromosome 11q23, are frequent in both infant and therapy-related leukemias. Gene expression analysis of MLL-rearranged B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemias (MLL B-ALLs) has identified these cases as a unique subtype of leukemia, characterized by the expression of genes associated with both lymphoid and myeloid hematopoietic lineages. Here we show that MLL fusions also generate a distinct genetic subtype of T-lineage ALL (MLL T-ALL), in which leukemic cells are characterized by an early arrest in thymocyte differentiation, with suggestive evidence of commitment to the γδ lineage. Interestingly, multiple genes linked to cell proliferation (eg, PCNA, MYC, CDK2, and POLA) were down-regulated in MLL-fusion samples, relative to those transformed by other T-ALL oncogenes (P &lt; .000 001, Fisher exact test). Overall, MLL T-ALL cases consistently demonstrated increased levels of expression of a subset of major HOX genes—HOXA9, HOXA10, and HOXC6—and the MEIS1 HOX coregulator (P &lt; .008, one-sided Wilcoxon test), a pattern of gene expression that was reiterated in MLL B-ALLs. However, expression of myeloid lineage genes, previously reported in MLL B-ALLs, was not identified in T-lineage cases with this abnormality, suggesting that myeloid gene dysregulation is dispensable in leukemic transformation mediated by MLL fusion proteins. Our findings implicate dysregulation of HOX gene family members as a dominant mechanism of leukemic transformation induced by chimeric MLL oncogenes. (Blood. 2003;102:262-268)


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2511-2511
Author(s):  
Jonathan Bond ◽  
Aleksandra Krzywon ◽  
Ludovic Lhermitte ◽  
Christophe Roumier ◽  
Anne Roggy ◽  
...  

Introduction: Traditional classification of acute lymphoblastic and myeloid leukemias (ALLs and AMLs) remains heavily based on phenotypic resemblance to normal hematopoietic precursors of the respective lineages. This framework can provide diagnostic challenges for immunophenotypically heterogeneous immature leukemias, which often have poor responses to treatment. This system also takes little account of modern concepts of hematopoietic identity that are mainly based on transcriptional signature identification and functional assays. Recent advances in genome-wide analytical methods developed to reconstruct landscapes of normal differentiation now provide an opportunity to re-evaluate traditional binary approaches to myeloid and lymphoid lineage assignment in leukemia. Methods: We used novel computational tools, including the recently described Iterative Clustering and Guide Gene Selection (ICGS) method to perform transcriptional analyses of a series of 125 T-ALLs and AMLs, which comprised a high proportion of phenotypically immature cases (53.1% and 40.8% respectively). The leukemias were additionally characterized by targeted next generation sequencing (NGS). ICGS was also used to analyze independent adult and pediatric T-ALL cohorts. Results: There was significant overlap in gene expression between leukemias of different diagnostic categories. In contrast to traditional clustering methods, ICGS analysis permitted unbiased classification of acute leukemias along a continuum of hematopoietic differentiation, according to the expression of a limited number of lineage-discriminating guide genes that defined hematopoietic cell expression modules. While AMLs and T-ALLs at either end of the differentiation spectrum showed specific enrichment for transcriptional signatures of the corresponding lineage precursors, leukemias that were arrested at the myeloid/ T-lymphoid interface either showed no clear evidence of mature T-lymphoid or mature myeloid identity, or had incomplete Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitor Cell (HSPC) and mature myeloid cell profiles. NGS analysis revealed that the spectrum of differentiation arrest defined by ICGS is only partially paralleled by underlying mutational genotype. Notably, interface leukemias originally diagnosed as T-ALL were significantly more likely to have PTEN mutations than the rest of the T-ALL cohort (60% v 6.7%, p=0.0151), while RUNX1-mutated AMLs were restricted to interface clusters. We found that interface leukemias shared gene expression programs with a series of multi- or oligopotent hematopoietic progenitor populations, including the most immature CD34+CD1a-CD7- subset of early thymic precursors (ETPs). Within interface leukemias, enrichment for lymphoid progenitor population signatures including multi-lymphoid progenitors (MLPs), lymphoid-mono-dendritic progenitors (LMDPs), T-oriented CD127- and B-oriented CD127+ early lymphoid progenitors (ELPs) from an umbilical cord blood humanized mouse model and early B-cell progenitors, was more likely in cases that were originally diagnosed as AML, rather than T-ALL. In addition, transcriptional resemblance to both B/myeloid and T/myeloid mixed phenotype acute leukemias (MPALs) was primarily driven by AMLs within these interface clusters, suggesting that these cases demonstrate significant lymphoid transcriptional orientation. Conclusion: Our results suggest that traditional binary approaches to leukemia categorization are reductive, and that leukemias arrested at the T-lymphoid/ myeloid interface exhibit significant transcriptional heterogeneity. These data also provide evidence that a subset of leukemias originally diagnosed as AML may be more likely to arise from lymphoid-oriented progenitors and/or be arrested at an early stage of lymphoid orientation than is currently recognized. We believe that better identification of interface acute leukemias will allow improved evaluation of appropriate therapeutic options for these cases. Disclosures Boissel: NOVARTIS: Consultancy. Laurenti:GSK: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Kaneko ◽  
JD Rowley ◽  
D Variakojis ◽  
RR Chilcote ◽  
JW Moohr ◽  
...  

Chromosome and cytologic studies were performed on three Down's syndrome (DS) patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). All three patients had an aneuploid clone in their leukemic cells: 50, XX, +6, +19, +21, +22, +8, XX, +21, and 47,XY, +8, - 21 +dic(21;21)(p13;p11). Every patient appeared to have acute undifferentiated leukemia when the blast cells were examined with Wright-Giemsa stain; cytochemistry studies, however, showed that the leukemic blasts were in an early stage of myeloid differentiation. The two patients with +8 had a preleukemic phase; the blast cells of the patient with an extra no. 19 and no.22 could not be differentiated morphologically from those of the two patients with an extra no. 8. Our findings and a review of data on 40 other patients suggest that most DS children with ANLL have hyperdiploidy, which is usually related to gains of C, F, and /or G chromosomes, and that the abnormalities of +8 and of +19, +22 in DS children may be associated with acute leukemia (AL) in an early stage of myeloid differentiation.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 42-43
Author(s):  
Sapana S Jalnapurkar ◽  
Aishwarya Pawar ◽  
Patrick Somers ◽  
Gabrielle Ochoco ◽  
Subin S George ◽  
...  

Acute myeloid leukemia is caused by the accumulation of mutations in hematopoietic stem and myeloid progenitor cells, resulting in increased self-renewal, inhibition of differentiation, and aberrant proliferation. Although genomic studies have comprehensively identified genes that are mutated in acute leukemias, the functional roles of many of them, and the consequences of their mutations, remain poorly understood. PHF6 (PHD-finger protein 6) is an X-linked gene that is mutated in 3.2% of de novo AML, 4.7% CMML, 3% MDS, and 1.6% CML patients. Two-thirds of somatic mutations in PHF6 are frameshift and nonsense mutations distributed throughout the gene body, resulting in loss of PHF6 protein. One-third of the mutations are point mutations clustered in the ePHD2 (extended PHD) domain, and the consequence of these mutations on PHF6 function is unknown. The functional role of PHF6 and the mechanism by which PHF6 mutations accelerate AML has not yet been determined. In this study, we delineate the cellular and molecular function of PHF6 in AML using in vitro and in vivo models. In agreement with recently published reports, we found that pan-hematopoietic deletion of Phf6 using the Vav-Cre recombinase system gave competitive transplantation advantage to HSCs, with sustained multi-lineage reconstitution without exhaustion over three rounds of serial transplantations, demonstrating that Phf6 represses HSC self-renewal. However, loss of Phf6 alone was insufficient to cause hematopoietic malignancy in the mouse model when monitored for one year. To determine the function of PHF6 in AML progression, we transduced cKO (Vav-Cre; Phf6 flox) or WT (Vav-Cre only) bone marrow cells with MSCV retrovirus expressing HOXA9 (WT+HOXA9 and cKO+HOXA9), and transplanted into irradiated recipient mice. The resulting HOXA9-driven AML was greatly accelerated in the Phf6 cKO background, with recipient mice succumbing faster (median survival 119 days) as compared to recipients transduced with HOXA9-transduced WT cells (median survival &gt;180 days, p=0.003) (Fig 1A). This was also reflected by an increase in the number of circulating immature leukemic cells in peripheral blood at earlier timepoints. HOXA9-transduced cKO cells showed higher serial replating ability in an in vitro colony forming assay as compared with HOXA9-transduced WT cells (Fig 1B). We further investigated the molecular function of PHF6 using the THP-1 human AML cell line. PHF6 is a chromatin-binding protein with two ePHD domains, and its binding partners and pattern of chromatin occupancy are unclear. Using ChIP-Seq, we identified that PHF6 occupies enhancers, and its peaks show striking alignment with the peaks of the key myeloid transcription factors (TFs) RUNX1, PU.1, and IRF8 (Fig 1C). To assess the effect of the clinically relevant point mutation R274Q (in the ePHD2 domain) on the transcriptional effects produced by PHF6, we first generated a PHF6 KO clone from the THP-1 cell line, and then re-expressed either WT PHF6 or R274Q-mutant PHF6 in this KO line. Re-expression of WT PHF6 rescued the extensive gene expression changes produced by its knockout, but R274Q-mutant PHF6 was unable to produce any gene expression changes, indicating that it is a "transcriptionally dead" mutant (Fig 1D). Gene Ontology analysis of transcriptome changes induced by WT PHF6 showed that PHF6 promotes the expression of myeloid differentiation gene sets. In summary, PHF6 restricts AML progression by binding enhancers with key myeloid TFs, and promoting the expression of myeloid differentiation genes. R274Q mutation renders PHF6 unable to exert any downstream expression changes, indicating that the ePHD2 domain (where R274 is located, clustered with other amino acids showing point mutations in hematopoietic malignancies) is critical for PHF6 function, and likely mediates important functional interactions with chromatin partners. Our future work will involve dissection of the sequence of molecular events governed by PHF6 following enhancer occupancy, and the role of PHF6 in repressing AML self-renewal and promoting differentiation. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Kaneko ◽  
JD Rowley ◽  
D Variakojis ◽  
RR Chilcote ◽  
JW Moohr ◽  
...  

Abstract Chromosome and cytologic studies were performed on three Down's syndrome (DS) patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). All three patients had an aneuploid clone in their leukemic cells: 50, XX, +6, +19, +21, +22, +8, XX, +21, and 47,XY, +8, - 21 +dic(21;21)(p13;p11). Every patient appeared to have acute undifferentiated leukemia when the blast cells were examined with Wright-Giemsa stain; cytochemistry studies, however, showed that the leukemic blasts were in an early stage of myeloid differentiation. The two patients with +8 had a preleukemic phase; the blast cells of the patient with an extra no. 19 and no.22 could not be differentiated morphologically from those of the two patients with an extra no. 8. Our findings and a review of data on 40 other patients suggest that most DS children with ANLL have hyperdiploidy, which is usually related to gains of C, F, and /or G chromosomes, and that the abnormalities of +8 and of +19, +22 in DS children may be associated with acute leukemia (AL) in an early stage of myeloid differentiation.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (8) ◽  
pp. 2066-2073
Author(s):  
M Lubbert ◽  
W Oster ◽  
WD Ludwig ◽  
A Ganser ◽  
R Mertelsmann ◽  
...  

Expression of numerous genes encoding myeloid-specific proteins is tightly regulated during normal myeloid differentiation. This heterogeneous group of genes thus offers a tool for dissection of different maturational steps of myelopoiesis. We have previously shown that the human myeloperoxidase (MPO) gene is modified at numerous CpG residues in normal myeloid cells and in myeloid cell lines in a development-specific and expression-associated manner. In the present work, we have applied this type of methylation analysis to primary leukemia myeloid cell samples. We found that expression of MPO messenger RNA (mRNA) is grossly limited to leukemias of late myeloblastic and promyelocytic stages; expression is thus associated with progressive demethylation in the 5′ region of the MPO gene. This modification was not global. Low-level induction of MPO mRNA expression in very immature leukemic cells using phorbol ester was not accompanied by progressive demethylation. This type of methylation analysis of a myeloid-specific gene may yield a molecular indicator for different types of myeloid leukemias.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Bond ◽  
Aleksandra Krzywon ◽  
Ludovic Lhermitte ◽  
Christophe Roumier ◽  
Anne Roggy ◽  
...  

AbstractClassification of acute lymphoblastic and myeloid leukemias (ALL and AML) remains heavily based on phenotypic resemblance to normal hematopoietic precursors. This framework can provide diagnostic challenges for immunophenotypically heterogeneous immature leukemias, and ignores recent advances in understanding of developmental multipotency of diverse normal hematopoietic progenitor populations that are identified by transcriptional signatures. We performed transcriptional analyses of a large series of acute myeloid and lymphoid leukemias and detected significant overlap in gene expression between cases in different diagnostic categories. Bioinformatic classification of leukemias along a continuum of hematopoietic differentiation identified leukemias at the myeloid/T-lymphoid interface, which shared gene expression programs with a series of multi or oligopotent hematopoietic progenitor populations, including the most immature CD34+CD1a-CD7- subset of early thymic precursors. Within these interface acute leukemias (IALs), transcriptional resemblance to early lymphoid progenitor populations and biphenotypic leukemias was more evident in cases originally diagnosed as AML, rather than T-ALL. Further prognostic analyses revealed that expression of IAL transcriptional programs significantly correlated with poor outcome in independent AML patient cohorts. Our results suggest that traditional binary approaches to acute leukemia categorization are reductive, and that identification of IALs could allow better treatment allocation and evaluation of therapeutic options.


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