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Gene expression profiling of minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia: M0 is a distinct entity subdivided by RUNX1 mutation status

Authors :
Claudia A.J. Erpelinck-Verschueren
Harry Vrieling
Sigrid M. A. Swagemakers
Ruud Delwel
Peter J. van der Spek
Bas J. Wouters
Peter J. M. Valk
Micheline Giphart-Gassler
Fernando P.G. Silva
Hematology
Pathology
Source :
Blood, 114(14), 3001-3007. American Society of Hematology
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Minimally differentiated acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M0) is defined by immature morphology and expression of early hematologic markers. By gene expression profiling (GEP) and subsequent unsupervised analysis of 35 AML-M0 samples and 253 previously reported AML cases, we demonstrate that AML-M0 cases express a unique signature that is largely separated from other molecular subtypes. Hematologic transcription regulators such as CEBPA, CEBPD, and ETV6, and the differentiation associated gene MPO appeared strongly down-regulated, in line with the primitive state of this leukemia. AML-M0 frequently carries loss-of-function RUNX1 mutation. Unsupervised analyses revealed a subdivision between AML-M0 cases with and without RUNX1 mutations. RUNX1 mutant AML-M0 samples showed a distinct up-regulation of B cell-related genes such as members of the B-cell receptor complex, transcription regulators RUNX3, ETS2, IRF8, or PRDM1, and major histocompatibility complex class II genes. Importantly, prediction with high accuracy of the AML-M0 subtype and prediction of patients carrying RUNX1 mutation within this subtype were possible based on the expression level of only a few transcripts. We propose that RUNX1 mutations in this AML subgroup cause lineage infidelity, leading to aberrant coexpression of myeloid and B-lymphoid genes. Furthermore, our results imply that AML-M0, although originally determined by morphology, constitutes a leukemia subgroup. (Blood. 2009; 114: 3001-3007)

Details

ISSN :
00064971
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood, 114(14), 3001-3007. American Society of Hematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be7871847e0fc3d1a6cb40ed304bedc9