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Aneuploid acute myeloid leukemia exhibits a signature of genomic alterations in the cell cycle and protein degradation machinery

Authors :
Elisa Ficarra
Ilaria Iacobucci
Carmen Baldazzi
Giorgia Simonetti
Elisa Zuffa
Emanuela Ottaviani
Jesús M. Hernández
Antonella Padella
Stefania Paolini
Eugenia Franchini
Federica Zanotti
Giovanni Martinelli
Peter Vandenberghe
Anna Maria Ferrari
Samantha Bruno
Marco Sazzini
Torsten Haferlach
Nicoletta Testoni
Gastone Castellani
Marco Manfrini
Annalisa Astolfi
Simona Bernardi
Italo Faria do Valle
Maria Antonella Laginestra
Jan Cools
Maria Chiara Fontana
Cristina Papayannidis
Giovanni Marconi
Eugenio Fonzi
Daniel Remondini
Michele Cavo
Viviana Guadagnuolo
Lars Bullinger
Simonetti, Giorgia
Padella, Antonella
do Valle, Italo Farìa
Fontana, Maria Chiara
Fonzi, Eugenio
Bruno, Samantha
Baldazzi, Carmen
Guadagnuolo, Viviana
Manfrini, Marco
Ferrari, Anna
Paolini, Stefania
Papayannidis, Cristina
Marconi, Giovanni
Franchini, Eugenia
Zuffa, Elisa
Laginestra, Maria Antonella
Zanotti, Federica
Astolfi, Annalisa
Iacobucci, Ilaria
Bernardi, Simona
Sazzini, Marco
Ficarra, Elisa
Hernandez, Jesus Maria
Vandenberghe, Peter
Cools, Jan
Bullinger, Lar
Ottaviani, Emanuela
Testoni, Nicoletta
Cavo, Michele
Haferlach, Torsten
Castellani, Gastone
Remondini, Daniel
Martinelli, Giovanni
Source :
Cancer
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Background Aneuploidy occurs in more than 20% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cases and correlates with an adverse prognosis. Methods To understand the molecular bases of aneuploid acute myeloid leukemia (A‐AML), this study examined the genomic profile in 42 A‐AML cases and 35 euploid acute myeloid leukemia (E‐AML) cases. Results A‐AML was characterized by increased genomic complexity based on exonic variants (an average of 26 somatic mutations per sample vs 15 for E‐AML). The integration of exome, copy number, and gene expression data revealed alterations in genes involved in DNA repair (eg, SLX4IP, RINT1, HINT1, and ATR) and the cell cycle (eg, MCM2, MCM4, MCM5, MCM7, MCM8, MCM10, UBE2C, USP37, CK2, CK3, CK4, BUB1B, NUSAP1, and E2F) in A‐AML, which was associated with a 3‐gene signature defined by PLK1 and CDC20 upregulation and RAD50 downregulation and with structural or functional silencing of the p53 transcriptional program. Moreover, A‐AML was enriched for alterations in the protein ubiquitination and degradation pathway (eg, increased levels of UHRF1 and UBE2C and decreased UBA3 expression), response to reactive oxygen species, energy metabolism, and biosynthetic processes, which may help in facing the unbalanced protein load. E‐AML was associated with BCOR/BCORL1 mutations and HOX gene overexpression. Conclusions These findings indicate that aneuploidy‐related and leukemia‐specific alterations cooperate to tolerate an abnormal chromosome number in AML, and they point to the mitotic and protein degradation machineries as potential therapeutic targets.<br />Aneuploid acute myeloid leukemia (A‐AML) is associated with genomic and transcriptional alterations in the cell cycle and protein degradation pathways. The upregulation of PLK1 and CDC20 and the downregulation of RAD50 and of a p53‐related signature are hallmarks of A‐AML.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....878728d6861052601dff7e9f15fc2128