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Oncogenic cooperation between TCF7-SPI1 and NRAS(G12D) requires β-catenin activity to drive T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Authors :
Van Thillo, Q
De Bie, J
Seneviratne, JA
Demeyer, S
Omari, S
Balachandran, A
Zhai, V
Tam, WL
Sweron, B
Geerdens, E
Gielen, O
Provost, S
Segers, H
Boeckx, N
Marshall, GM
Cheung, BB
Isobe, K
Kato, I
Takita, J
Amos, TG
Deveson, IW
McCalmont, H
Lock, RB
Oxley, EP
Garwood, MM
Dickins, RA
Uyttebroeck, A
Carter, DR
Cools, J
de Bock, CE
Van Thillo, Q
De Bie, J
Seneviratne, JA
Demeyer, S
Omari, S
Balachandran, A
Zhai, V
Tam, WL
Sweron, B
Geerdens, E
Gielen, O
Provost, S
Segers, H
Boeckx, N
Marshall, GM
Cheung, BB
Isobe, K
Kato, I
Takita, J
Amos, TG
Deveson, IW
McCalmont, H
Lock, RB
Oxley, EP
Garwood, MM
Dickins, RA
Uyttebroeck, A
Carter, DR
Cools, J
de Bock, CE
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Spi-1 Proto-Oncogene (SPI1) fusion genes are recurrently found in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cases but are insufficient to drive leukemogenesis. Here we show that SPI1 fusions in combination with activating NRAS mutations drive an immature T-ALL in vivo using a conditional bone marrow transplant mouse model. Addition of the oncogenic fusion to the NRAS mutation also results in a higher leukemic stem cell frequency. Mechanistically, genetic deletion of the β-catenin binding domain within Transcription factor 7 (TCF7)-SPI1 or use of a TCF/β-catenin interaction antagonist abolishes the oncogenic activity of the fusion. Targeting the TCF7-SPI1 fusion in vivo with a doxycycline-inducible knockdown results in increased differentiation. Moreover, both pharmacological and genetic inhibition lead to down-regulation of SPI1 targets. Together, our results reveal an example where TCF7-SPI1 leukemia is vulnerable to pharmacological targeting of the TCF/β-catenin interaction.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1274124463
Document Type :
Electronic Resource