[PDF][PDF] Mechanisms of progression of myeloid preleukemia to transformed myeloid leukemia in children with Down syndrome

M Labuhn, K Perkins, S Matzk, L Varghese, C Garnett… - Cancer cell, 2019 - cell.com
M Labuhn, K Perkins, S Matzk, L Varghese, C Garnett, E Papaemmanuil, M Metzner…
Cancer cell, 2019cell.com
Myeloid leukemia in Down syndrome (ML-DS) clonally evolves from transient abnormal
myelopoiesis (TAM), a preleukemic condition in DS newborns. To define mechanisms of
leukemic transformation, we combined exome and targeted resequencing of 111 TAM and
141 ML-DS samples with functional analyses. TAM requires trisomy 21 and truncating
mutations in GATA1; additional TAM variants are usually not pathogenic. By contrast, in ML-
DS, clonal and subclonal variants are functionally required. We identified a recurrent and …
Summary
Myeloid leukemia in Down syndrome (ML-DS) clonally evolves from transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM), a preleukemic condition in DS newborns. To define mechanisms of leukemic transformation, we combined exome and targeted resequencing of 111 TAM and 141 ML-DS samples with functional analyses. TAM requires trisomy 21 and truncating mutations in GATA1; additional TAM variants are usually not pathogenic. By contrast, in ML-DS, clonal and subclonal variants are functionally required. We identified a recurrent and oncogenic hotspot gain-of-function mutation in myeloid cytokine receptor CSF2RB. By a multiplex CRISPR/Cas9 screen in an in vivo murine TAM model, we tested loss-of-function of 22 recurrently mutated ML-DS genes. Loss of 18 different genes produced leukemias that phenotypically, genetically, and transcriptionally mirrored ML-DS.
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