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The neuropeptide receptor calcitonin receptor-like (CALCRL) is a potential therapeutic target in acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors :
Angenendt L
Bormann E
Pabst C
Alla V
Görlich D
Braun L
Dohlich K
Schwöppe C
Bohlander SK
Arteaga MF
Wethmar K
Hartmann W
Angenendt A
Kessler T
Mesters RM
Stelljes M
Rothenberg-Thurley M
Spiekermann K
Hébert J
Sauvageau G
Valk PJM
Löwenberg B
Serve H
Müller-Tidow C
Lenz G
Wörmann BJ
Sauerland MC
Hiddemann W
Berdel WE
Krug U
Metzeler KH
Mikesch JH
Herold T
Schliemann C
Source :
Leukemia [Leukemia] 2019 Dec; Vol. 33 (12), pp. 2830-2841. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jun 10.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Calcitonin receptor-like (CALCRL) is a G-protein-coupled neuropeptide receptor involved in the regulation of blood pressure, angiogenesis, cell proliferation, and apoptosis, and is currently emerging as a novel target for the treatment of migraine. This study characterizes the role of CALCRL in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We analyzed CALCRL expression in collectively more than 1500 well-characterized AML patients from five international cohorts (AMLCG, HOVON, TCGA, Leucegene, and UKM) and evaluated associations with survival. In the AMLCG analytic cohort, increasing transcript levels of CALCRL were associated with decreasing complete remission rates (71.5%, 53.7%, 49.6% for low, intermediate, high CALCRL expression), 5-year overall (43.1%, 26.2%, 7.1%), and event-free survival (29.9%, 15.8%, 4.7%) (all P < 0.001). CALCRL levels remained associated with all endpoints on multivariable regression analyses. The prognostic impact was confirmed in all validation sets. Genes highly expressed in CALCRL <superscript>high</superscript> AML were significantly enriched in leukemic stem cell signatures and CALCRL levels were positively linked to the engraftment capacity of primary patient samples in immunocompromised mice. CRISPR-Cas9-mediated knockout of CALCRL significantly impaired colony formation in human myeloid leukemia cell lines. Overall, our study demonstrates that CALCRL predicts outcome beyond existing risk factors and is a potential therapeutic target in AML.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-5551
Volume :
33
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Leukemia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31182782
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-019-0505-x