Back to Search Start Over

Infectious stimuli promote malignant B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the absence of AID

Authors :
Rodriguez-Hernandez, Guillermo
Opitz, Friederike V.
Delgado, Pilar
Walter, Carolin
Alvarez-Prado, Angel F.
Gonzalez-Herrero, Ines
Auer, Franziska
Fischer, Ute
Janssen, Stefan
Bartenhagen, Christoph
Raboso-Gallego, Javier
Casado-Garcia, Ana
Orfao, Alberto
Blanco, Oscar
Alonso-Lopez, Diego
De Las Rivas, Javier
Gonzalez de Tena-Davila, Sara
Muschen, Markus
Dugas, Martin
Garcia Criado, Francisco Javier
Garcia Cenador, Maria Begona
Vicente-Duenas, Carolina
Hauer, Julia
Ramiro, Almudena R.
Sanchez-Garcia, Isidro
Borkhardt, Arndt
Rodriguez-Hernandez, Guillermo
Opitz, Friederike V.
Delgado, Pilar
Walter, Carolin
Alvarez-Prado, Angel F.
Gonzalez-Herrero, Ines
Auer, Franziska
Fischer, Ute
Janssen, Stefan
Bartenhagen, Christoph
Raboso-Gallego, Javier
Casado-Garcia, Ana
Orfao, Alberto
Blanco, Oscar
Alonso-Lopez, Diego
De Las Rivas, Javier
Gonzalez de Tena-Davila, Sara
Muschen, Markus
Dugas, Martin
Garcia Criado, Francisco Javier
Garcia Cenador, Maria Begona
Vicente-Duenas, Carolina
Hauer, Julia
Ramiro, Almudena R.
Sanchez-Garcia, Isidro
Borkhardt, Arndt
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The prerequisite to prevent childhood B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is to decipher its etiology. The current model suggests that infection triggers B-ALL development through induction of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID; also known as AICDA) in precursor B-cells. This evidence has been largely acquired through the use of ex vivo functional studies. However, whether this mechanism governs native non-transplant B-ALL development is unknown. Here we show that, surprisingly, AID genetic deletion does not affect B-ALL development in Pax5-haploinsufficient mice prone to B-ALL upon natural infection exposure. We next test the effect of premature AID expression from earliest pro-B-cell stages in B-cell transformation. The generation of AID off-target mutagenic activity in precursor B-cells does not promote B-ALL. Likewise, known drivers of human B-ALL are not preferentially targeted by AID. Overall these results suggest that infections promote B-ALL through AID-independent mechanisms, providing evidence for a new model of childhood B-ALL development.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1201313110
Document Type :
Electronic Resource