Tumor suppressors BTG1 and IKZF1 cooperate during mouse leukemia development and increase relapse risk in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients

  • Blanca Scheijen
  • Judith M Boer
  • Rene' Marke
  • Esther Tijchon
  • Dorette van Ingen Schenau
  • Esme' Waanders
  • Liesbeth van Emst
  • Laurens T van der Meer
  • Rob Pieters
  • Gabriele Escherich
  • Martin Horstmann
  • Edwin Sonneveld
  • Nicola Venn
  • Rosemary Sutton
  • Luciano Dalla-Pozza
  • Roland P Kuiper
  • Peter M Hoogerbrugge
  • Monique L den Boer
  • Frank N van Leeuwen

Abstract

Deletions and mutations affecting lymphoid transcription factor IKZF1 (IKAROS) are associated with an increased relapse risk and poor outcome in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia. However, additional genetic events may either enhance or negate the effects of IKZF1 deletions on prognosis. In a large discovery cohort of 533 childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients, we observed that single copy losses of BTG1 were significantly enriched in IKZF1-deleted B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (P=0.007). While BTG1 deletions alone had no impact on prognosis, the combined presence of BTG1 and IKZF1 deletions was associated with a significantly lower 5-year event-free survival (P=0.0003) and higher 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse (P=0.005) when compared with IKZF1-deleted cases without BTG1 aberrations. In contrast, other copy number losses commonly observed in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia, such as CDKN2A/B, PAX5, EBF1 or RB1, did not affect outcome of IKZF1-deleted acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients. To establish whether the combined loss of IKZF1 and BTG1 function cooperate in leukemogenesis, Btg1-deficient mice were crossed onto an Ikzf1 heterozygous background. We observed that loss of Btg1 increased the tumor incidence of Ikzf1+/- mice in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, murine B-cells deficient for Btg1 and Ikzf1+/- displayed increased resistance against glucocorticoids, but not to other chemotherapeutic drugs. Together, our results identify BTG1 as a tumor suppressor in leukemia that, when deleted, strongly enhances relapse risk in IKZF1-deleted B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and augments the glucocorticoid resistance phenotype mediated by loss of IKZF1 function.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0390-6078
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 03.2017
PubMed 27979924