scholarly journals DNA methylome analysis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells reveals stochastic de novo DNA methylation in CpG islands

Epigenomics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1367-1387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Per Wahlberg ◽  
Anders Lundmark ◽  
Jessica Nordlund ◽  
Stephan Busche ◽  
Amanda Raine ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3736-3736
Author(s):  
Huimin Geng ◽  
Mignon L. Loh ◽  
Richard C. Harvey ◽  
I-Ming Chen ◽  
Meenakshi Devidas ◽  
...  

Abstract Although survival of children with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) has improved substantially over time, 15% to 20% of patients will relapse, and most of those who experience a bone marrow relapse will die. A better understanding of genetic and epigenetic aberrations in relapsed ALL will facilitate new strategies for risk stratification and targeted therapy. In this collaborative study with the Therapeutically Applicable Research to Generate Effective Treatments (TARGET) project, we performed high resolution genome-wide DNA methylation profiling using the HELP (HpaII tiny fragment Enrichment by Ligation-mediated PCR) array on a total of 178 (110 diagnosis, 68 relapse) leukemia samples from 111 patients with childhood B-ALL enrolled on the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) clinical trials who experienced relapsed, and 12 normal preB samples isolated from the bone marrows of 12 healthy individuals. The HELP array covers 117,521 CpG sites, annotated to ∼22,000 gene promoters. For eight diagnosis/relapse pairs, base-pair resolution DNA methylation using the eRRBS (enhanced Reduced Representation Bisulfite Sequencing) method was also performed on Illumina HiSeq2000. The median relapse time for the 111 patients was 21.8 months (range 2.1 to 56.2). Unsupervised clustering analysis using the HELP data revealed seven clusters: one cluster contained only the 12 normal preB samples; four clusters were enriched with MLLr, ETV6/RUNX1, Trisomy 4+10, and TCF3/PBX1 samples, respectively. The sixth cluster was not enriched for specific cytogenetic cases, but interestingly, all cases in this cluster were NCI High Risk (age>10 years or WBC>=50,000; p<0.0001, Fisher’s Exact test) while the seventh cluster has a mixture of other cases. Supervised analysis of HELP profiles between paired relapse/diagnosis samples (n=67) revealed a markedly aberrant DNA methylation signature (1011 probesets, 888 genes, FDR<0.01 and methylation difference dx >25%, paired t-test), with 70% of the genes hyper- and 30% hypo-methylated in relapse samples. Using a Bayesian predictor and leave-one-out cross validation, this methylation signature could predict a sample as diagnosis or relapse with 95.3% accuracy. When comparing early (<36 months; n=50) versus late relapses (>=36 months; n=18), we detected a profound hypermethylation signature in early relapse (96.6% of the 610 probesets, 544 genes, FDR<0.01, dx >25%). Finally, we identified 1800 probesets (1658 genes) as differentially methylated within all cytogenetic subtypes described above compared to the normal preB samples (Dunnett’s test with normal preB as reference, FDR<0.01, dx>25%). Again the majority (70%) of those genes were hypermethylated in relapse as compared to diagnostic and normal preB. The base-pair resolution and more comprehensive eRRBS methylation analysis for the eight pairs of samples identified 39,679 CpG sites as differentially methylated (dx >25%, FDR<0.01), with 78.2% CpG sites hyper- and 21.2% hypo-methylated in relapse samples. Remarkably, the hypermethylated CpGs are primarily in promoter regions (50%, defined as +/-1kb to TSS), followed by intergenic (26%), then intragenic (14%), and exonic (10%) regions. In contrast, the hypomethylated CpGs are mainly in intragenic (48%), followed by intergenic (31%), exonic (14%) and promoter (7%) regions. The hypermethylated CpGs were mainly in CpG islands (86%) or CpG shores (10%), while hypomethylated CpGs were not (CpG islands: 8%, CpG shores: 27%). We further identified 3040 differentially methylated regions (DMRs) with a median size 426 bp. 78.4% of those DMRs were hyper- (1362 gene promoters) and 21.6% hypo-methylated (98 promoters) in relapse compared to diagnostic samples. Gene set enrichment and Ingenuity pathway analysis showed epigenetically disrupted pathways that are highly involved in cell signaling, and embryonic and organismal development. Taken together, our genome-wide high resolution DNA methylation analysis on a large cohort of relapsed childhood B-ALL from the COG trial identified unique methylation signatures that correlated with relapse and with specific genetic subsets. Those methylation signatures featured prevailing promoter hypermethylation and to a lesser extent, intrageneic hypomethylation. Epigenetically dysregulated gene networks in those relapse samples involved cell signaling, and embryonic and organismal development. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1322-1322
Author(s):  
Manabu Kusakabe ◽  
Ann Chong Sun ◽  
Kateryna Tyshchenko ◽  
Rachel Wong ◽  
Aastha Nanda ◽  
...  

Abstract Mechanistic studies in human cancer have relied heavily on established cell lines and genetically engineered mouse models, but these are limited by in vitro adaptation and species context issues, respectively. More recent efforts have utilized patient-derived xenografts (PDX); however, as an experimental model these are hampered by their variable genetic background, logistic challenges in establishing and distributing diverse collections, and the fact they cannot be independently reproduced. We report here a completely synthetic, efficient, and highly reproducible means for generating T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) de novo by lentiviral transduction of normal CD34+ human cord blood (CB) derived hematopoietic progenitors with a combination of known T-ALL oncogenes. Transduced CB cells exhibit differentiation arrest and multi-log expansion when cultured in vitro on OP9-DL1 feeders, and generate serially transplantable, aggressive leukemia when injected into immunodeficient NSG mice with latencies as short as 80 days (median 161 days, range 79-321 days). RNA-seq analysis of synthetic CB leukemias confirmed their reproducibility and similarity to PDX tumors, while whole exome sequencing revealed ongoing clonal evolution in vivo with acquisition of secondary mutations that are seen recurrently in natural human disease. The in vitro component of this synthetic system affords direct access to "pre-leukemia" cells undergoing the very first molecular changes as they are redirected from normal to malignant developmental trajectories. Accordingly, we performed RNA-seq and modified histone ChIP-seq on nascently transduced CB cells harvested from the first 2-3 weeks in culture. We identified coordinate upregulation of multiple anterior HOXB genes (HOXB2-B5) with contiguous H3K27 demethylation/acetylation as a striking feature in these early pre-leukemia cells. Interestingly, we also found coordinate upregulation of these same HOXB genes in a cohort of 264 patient T-ALLs (COG TARGET study) and that they defined a subset of patients with significantly poorer event-free survival (Log-rank p-value = 0.0132). Patients in the "HOXB high" subgroup are distinct from those with ETP-ALL, but are enriched within TAL1, NKX2-1, and "unknown" transcription factor genetic subgroups. We further show by shRNA-mediated knockdown that HOXB gene expression confers growth advantage in nascently transduced CB cells, established synthetic CB leukemias, and a subset of established human T-ALL cell lines. Of note, while there is prior literature on the role of HOXA genes in AML and T-ALL, and of HOXB genes in normal HSC expansion, this is the first report to our knowledge of a role for HOXB genes in human T-ALL despite over 2 decades of studies relying mostly on mouse leukemia and cell line models. The synthetic approach we have taken here allows investigation of both early and late events in human leukemogenesis and delivers an efficient and reproducible experimental platform that can support functional testing of individual genetic variants necessary for precision medicine efforts and targeted drug screening/validation. Further, since all tumors including PDXs continue to evolve during serial propagation in vivo, synthetic tumors represent perhaps the only means by which we can explore early events in cellular transformation and segregate their biology from confounding effects of multiple and varied secondary events that accumulate in highly "evolved" samples. Disclosures Steidl: Seattle Genetics: Consultancy; Tioma: Research Funding; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Research Funding; Roche: Consultancy; Juno Therapeutics: Consultancy; Nanostring: Patents & Royalties: patent holding.


Author(s):  
Miguel Mendivil-Perez ◽  
Carlos Velez-Pardo ◽  
Lina Maria Quiroz-Duque ◽  
Alexandra Restrepo-Rincon ◽  
Natalia Andrea Valencia-Zuluaga ◽  
...  

B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is a hematologic disorder characterized by the abnormal proliferation and accumulation of immature B-lymphoblasts arrested at various stages of differentiation. Despite advances in treatment, a significant percentage of pediatric patients with precursor B-ALL still relapse. Therefore, alternative therapies are needed to improve the cure rates for pediatric patients. TPEN (N, N, N&rsquo;, N&rsquo;-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)-ethylenediamine).is a pro-oxidant agent capable of selectively inducing apoptosis in leukemia cells. Consequently, it has been suggested that TPEN could be a potential agent for oxidative therapy. However, it is not yet known whether TPEN can selectively destroy leukemia cells in a more disease-like model, for example, the bloodstream and bone marrow (BM), in vitro. This investigation is an extension of a previous study that dealt with the effect of TPEN on ex vivo isolated/purified refractory B-ALL cells. Here, we evaluated the effect of TPEN on whole BM from nonleukemic patients (control) or pediatric patients diagnosed with de novo B-ALL or refractory B-ALL cells by analyzing the hematopoietic cell lineage marker CD34/CD19. Although TPEN was innocuous to nonleukemic BM (n=3), we found that TPEN significantly induced apoptosis in de novo (n = 5) and refractory B-ALL (n = 6) leukemic cell populations. Moreover, TPEN significantly increased the counts of cells positive for the oxidation of the stress sensor protein DJ-1, a sign of the formation of H2O2, and significantly increased the counts of cells positive for the pro-apoptotic proteins TP53, PUMA, and CASPASE-3 (CASP-3), indicative of apoptosis, in B-ALL cells. We demonstrate that TPEN selectively eliminates B-ALL cells independent of age, diagnosis status (de novo or refractory), sex, karyotype, or immunophenotype. Understanding TPEN-induced cell death in leukemia cells provides insight into more effective therapeutic oxidation-inducing anticancer agents.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3621-3621
Author(s):  
Xiaoqing Li ◽  
Jun Liu ◽  
Rui Zhou ◽  
Jine Zheng ◽  
Junxia Yao ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3621 Increasing evidence suggests that dysregulation of miRNAs plays an important pathological role in various malignant diseases including acute leukemia. To reveal the contributions of aberrant epigenetic modifications to the deregulated miRNA expression in precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, we examined the miRNA expression profile in NALM-6 cells after treatment with the combination of 5-AZA-2'-deoxycytidine (AZA) and trichostatin A (TSA). We found that the treatment significantly increased expression of 34 miRNAs and decreased the expression of 10 miRNAs. One of the most significantly upregulated miRNAs is miR-218, an intronic miRNA that can be transcribed from either pri-miR-218-1 or pri-miR-218-2, residing in the intron of the SLIT2 gene or SLIT3 gene respectively. Interestingly, we detected that pri-miR-218-1 and its host gene SLIT2, but not pri-miR-218-2 and SLIT3, were induced by AZA plus TSA treatment. Consistent with this observation, we showed that the CpG islands in SLIT2 promoter was highly methylated in NALM-6 cells and AZA plus TSA treatment significantly decreased DNA methylaiton in this region. We found that targeting of the 3'untranslated region of CDK6, a bona fide oncogenic factor, by miR-218 resulting in translational repression. Overexpression of miR-218 expression in NALM-6 cells by transfection of miR-218 precursor decreased cellular expression of CDK6 at the protein level, but not at the message level. AZA and TSA treatment decreased CDK6 expression in NALM-6 cells, presumably through upregulating miR-218. Our results indicate that epigenetic regulation plays an important role in controlling miRNA expression in human acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Epigenetic silencing of miR-218 may contribute to the overexpression of CDK6 in NALM-6 cells. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2242-2242
Author(s):  
Xiaoqing Li ◽  
Jun Liu ◽  
Rui Zhou ◽  
Yanli He ◽  
Shi Huang ◽  
...  

Abstract The regulation of human microRNA (miRNA) expression is still poorly understood and aberrant epigenetic regulation has recently been implicated in the down-regulation of tumor suppressor miRNAs. In this study, we investigated whether histone modifications would contribute to the dysregulation of miRNAs in lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Using a precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line, NALM-6 cells, we demonstrated by miRNA microarray analysis that a specific histone deacetylases inhibitor, trichostatin A (TSA), induced a differential alteration in cellular miRNA expression. A total of 10 miRNAs were down-regulated and 31 up-regulated significantly following TSA treatment. Among TSA-up-regulated miRNAs, miR-22 is an extronic miRNA and resides in the second exon of the non-coding transcript MGC14376. Up-regulation of both miR-22 and MGC14376 was found in NALM-6 cells treated with TSA but not 5-AZA-2’-deoxycytidine, a DNA demethylating agent. Luciferase reporter analysis identified three regions in the promoter of miR-22 and MGC14376 that differentially regulated its transcriptional activation. Although there is a CpG island within the promoter of miR-22 and MGC14376, no obvious methylation was detected at this region in NALM-6 cells. Conversely, H3K27 trimethylation (H3K27triM)-associated histone modification was identified in the first intron of MGC14376 gene and was involved in TSA-induced miR-22 expression. Thus, miR-22 silencing in NALM-6 cells involves H3K27triM-associated histone modification but is independent of DNA methylation, suggesting that methylation-independent H3K27triM histone modification may be an important mechanism for miRNA dysregulation in cancer cells.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 28-29
Author(s):  
Juliette Roels ◽  
Morgan Thénoz ◽  
Bronisława Szarzyńska ◽  
Mattias Landfors ◽  
Stien De Coninck ◽  
...  

During the last decade, aberrant DNA methylation has been identified as a hallmark of human cancer and several studies have highlighted the potential of DNA methylation as a clinically or diagnostically relevant biomarker. In comparison to their normal healthy counterparts, cancer cells generally display DNA hypermethylation at specific CpG islands, but the actual mechanism that drives this so-called CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) remains poorly understood. To profile the DNA methylation landscape of human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), we analyzed 109 T-ALLs together with 10 stages of normal T cell development, which are considered the normal human counterparts of this disease, by 850 EPIC arrays. Here, we show that CpG islands are hypermethylated in all human T- ALLs compared to their normal counterparts. We designed a DNA methylation signature that can distinguish two types of T-ALL, with low or high levels of CpG island hypermethylation. This profile is dominated by CpGs in promoters of PRC2 target genes. T-ALLs with high levels of CpG island hypermethylation show low levels of H3K27me3 and vice versa, resulting in gene repression in both subtypes of T-ALL by different mechanisms. Furthermore, we found that aberrant CpG island hypermethylation shows a strong correlation with the epigenetic age of the leukemic T cells. By investigating the DNA methylation profile of two distinct mouse T-ALL models, the Lck-Cre Ptenfl/fland the CD2-Lmo2 transgenic mouse model, by Reduced Representation Bisulfite Sequencing, we could indeed recapitulate the DNA methylation features of the two human T-ALL subtypes in mice (Fig.1). The aggressive, fast-transforming Ptenfl/flmouse model displays low levels of CpG island hypermethylation, which correlated with human T-ALLs that have a shorter proliferative history and a worse prognosis. In contrast, murine CD2-Lmo2 T-ALLs have a longer disease latency and display a CpG island hypermethylation phenotype that is similar to human T-ALLs with a longer proliferative history. In CD2-Lmo2 mice, a pre-leukemic phase is present with self-renewing thymocytes. We elucidate that the CpG island methylation signature is gradually established in aging pre-leukemic thymocytes of 8, 16 and 24 weeks old CD2-Lmo2 mice (Fig.1). Of note, this hypermethylation phenotype is completely absent in age matched Lck-Cre Ptenfl/flmice that did not yet develop leukemia, suggesting that the proliferative history is responsible for aberrant CpG island DNA methylation observed in human T-ALL. Notably, this provides the first evidence that a pre-leukemic phase might be present in a large subset of human T-ALLs, and that epigenetic aberrations, either in the DNA methylation or histone methylation machinery are one of the first detectable alterations during T-ALL development. Finally, using patient derived xenografts (PDX), we show that DNA hypomethylation by the FDA-approved hypomethylating agent Decitabine is very effective in treating T-ALL. Gene expression profiling revealed that the anti-leukemic effect is exerted by down-regulation of the oncogenic MYC pathway. However, by profiling these PDX T-ALLs by EPIC arrays, we unexpectedly uncover that the age-related CpG island hypermethylation signature is completely resistant to Decitabine treatment. Altogether, our work demonstrates that DNA methylation reflects the epigenetic history of leukemic T cells and suggests that methylation-based subtypes of human T-ALL have followed a different trajectory towards T-cell transformation, possibly mediated by differences in the self-renewing capacity of the putative T-ALL cell-of-origin. Given that the concept of preleukemic thymocytes has only been reported in T-ALL mouse models so far, we here provide, for the first time, conceptual evidence that a pre-leukemic phase might also be involved in the pathogenesis of the human disease. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ezzatollah Fathi ◽  
Raheleh Farahzadi ◽  
Soheila Montazersaheb ◽  
Yasin Bagheri

Background:: Epigenetic modification pattern is considered as a characteristic feature in blood malignancies. Modifications in the DNA methylation modulators are recurrent in lymphoma and leukemia, so that, the distinct methylation pattern defines different types of leukemia. Generally, the role of epigenetics is less understood and most investigations are focused on genetic abnormalities and cytogenic studies to develop novel treatments for patients with hematologic disorders. Recently, understanding the underlying mechanism of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), especially epigenetic altera-tions as a driving force in the development of ALL opens a new era of investigation for developing promising strategy, be-yond available conventional therapy. Objective:: This review will focus on a better understanding of the epigenetic mechanisms in cancer development and pro-gression, with an emphasis on epigenetic alterations in ALL including, DNA methylation, histone modification, and mi-croRNA alterations. Other topics that will be discussed include the use of epigenetic alterations as a promising therapeutic target in order to develop novel well-suited approaches against ALL. Conclusion:: According to the literature review, leukemogenesis of ALL is extensively influenced by epigenetic modifica-tions, particularly DNA hyper-methylation, histone modification, and miRNA alteration.


Genes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 214
Author(s):  
Željko Antić ◽  
Stefan H. Lelieveld ◽  
Cédric G. van der Ham ◽  
Edwin Sonneveld ◽  
Peter M. Hoogerbrugge ◽  
...  

Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common pediatric malignancy and is characterized by clonal heterogeneity. Genomic mutations can increase proliferative potential of leukemic cells and cause treatment resistance. However, mechanisms driving mutagenesis and clonal diversification in ALL are not fully understood. In this proof of principle study, we performed whole genome sequencing of two cases with multiple relapses in order to investigate whether groups of mutations separated in time show distinct mutational signatures. Based on mutation allele frequencies at diagnosis and subsequent relapses, we clustered mutations into groups and performed cluster-specific mutational profile analysis and de novo signature extraction. In patient 1, who experienced two relapses, the analysis unraveled a continuous interplay of aberrant activation induced cytidine deaminase (AID)/apolipoprotein B editing complex (APOBEC) activity. The associated signatures SBS2 and SBS13 were present already at diagnosis, and although emerging mutations were lost in later relapses, the process remained active throughout disease evolution. Patient 2 had three relapses. We identified episodic mutational processes at diagnosis and first relapse leading to mutations resembling ultraviolet light-driven DNA damage, and thiopurine-associated damage at first relapse. In conclusion, our data shows that investigation of mutational processes in clusters separated in time may aid in understanding the mutational mechanisms and discovery of underlying causes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel N. Weinberg ◽  
Phillip Rosenbaum ◽  
Xiao Chen ◽  
Douglas Barrows ◽  
Cynthia Horth ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
De Novo ◽  

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