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C1Q labels a highly aggressive macrophage-like leukemia population indicating extramedullary infiltration and relapse

Authors :
Li-Xue Yang
Cheng-Tao Zhang
Meng-Ying Yang
Xue-Hong Zhang
Hong-Chen Liu
Chen-Hui Luo
Yue Jiang
Zhang-Man Wang
Zhong-Yin Yang
Zhao-Peng Shi
Yi-Ci Yang
Ruo-Qu Wei
Li Zhou
Jun Mi
Ai-Wu Zhou
Zhi-Rong Yao
Li Xia
Jin-Song Yan
Ying Lu
Source :
Blood. 141:766-786
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2023.

Abstract

Extramedullary infiltration (EMI) is a concomitant manifestation that may indicate poor outcome of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The underlying mechanism remains poorly understood and therapeutic options are limited. Here, we employed single-cell RNA sequencing on bone marrow (BM) and EMI samples from a patient with AML presenting pervasive leukemia cutis. A complement C1Q+ macrophage-like leukemia subset, which was enriched within cutis and existed in BM before EMI manifestations, was identified and further verified in multiple patients with AML. Genomic and transcriptional profiling disclosed mutation and gene expression signatures of patients with EMI that expressed high levels of C1Q. RNA sequencing and quantitative proteomic analysis revealed expression dynamics of C1Q from primary to relapse. Univariate and multivariate analysis demonstrated adverse prognosis significance of C1Q expression. Mechanistically, C1Q expression, which was modulated by transcription factor MAF BZIP transcription factor B, endowed leukemia cells with tissue infiltration ability, which could establish prominent cutaneous or gastrointestinal EMI nodules in patient-derived xenograft and cell line–derived xenograft models. Fibroblasts attracted migration of the C1Q+ leukemia cells through C1Q–globular C1Q receptor recognition and subsequent stimulation of transforming growth factor β1. This cell-to-cell communication also contributed to survival of C1Q+ leukemia cells under chemotherapy stress. Thus, C1Q served as a marker for AML with adverse prognosis, orchestrating cancer infiltration pathways through communicating with fibroblasts and represents a compelling therapeutic target for EMI.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
141
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ef52b0b6b59762946845437610fac92