miR-3151 interplays with its host gene BAALC and independently affects outcome of patients with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia

AK Eisfeld, G Marcucci, K Maharry… - Blood, The Journal …, 2012 - ashpublications.org
AK Eisfeld, G Marcucci, K Maharry, S Schwind, MD Radmacher, D Nicolet, H Becker
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2012ashpublications.org
High BAALC expression levels are associated with poor outcome in cytogenetically normal
acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) patients. Recently, miR-3151 was discovered in intron 1
of BAALC. To evaluate the prognostic significance of miR-3151 expression levels and to
gain insight into the biologic and prognostic interplay between miR-3151 and its host, miR-
3151 and BAALC expression were measured in pretreatment blood of 179 CN-AML
patients. Gene-expression profiling and miRNA-expression profiling were performed using …
Abstract
High BAALC expression levels are associated with poor outcome in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) patients. Recently, miR-3151 was discovered in intron 1 of BAALC. To evaluate the prognostic significance of miR-3151 expression levels and to gain insight into the biologic and prognostic interplay between miR-3151 and its host, miR-3151 and BAALC expression were measured in pretreatment blood of 179 CN-AML patients. Gene-expression profiling and miRNA-expression profiling were performed using microarrays. High miR-3151 expression was associated with shorter disease-free and overall survival, whereas high BAALC expression predicted failure of complete remission and shorter overall survival. Patients exhibiting high expression of both miR-3151 and BAALC had worse outcome than patients expressing low levels of either gene or both genes. In gene-expression profiling, high miR-3151 expressers showed down-regulation of genes involved in transcriptional regulation, posttranslational modification, and cancer pathways. Two genes, FBXL20 and USP40, were validated as direct miR-3151 targets. The results of the present study show that high expression of miR-3151 is an independent prognosticator for poor outcome in CN-AML and affects different outcome end points than its host gene, BAALC. The combination of both markers identified a patient subset with the poorest outcome. This interplay between an intronic miR and its host may have important biologic implications.
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