Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Identification of pre-leukaemic haematopoietic stem cells in acute leukaemia

Liran I. Shlush,     Sasan Zandi,     Amanda Mitchell,     Weihsu Claire Chen,     Joseph M. Brandwein, Vikas Gupta,     James A. Kennedy,     Aaron D. Schimmer,     Andre C. Schuh,     Karen W. Yee, Jessica L. McLeod,     Monica Doedens,     Jessie J. F. Medeiros,     Rene Marke,     Hyeoung Joon Kim,     Kwon Lee,     John D. McPherson,     Thomas J. Hudson,     The HALT Pan-Leukemia Gene Panel Consortium,     Andrew M. K. Brown,     Quang M. Trinh,     Lincoln D. Stein,     Mark D. Minden, Jean C. Y. Wang     & John E. Dick

                                                                                               DNMT3A mutation precedes NPM1 mutation in human AML and is present in stem/progenitor cells at diagnosis and remission.

Abstract:

In acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), the cell of origin, nature and biological consequences of initiating lesions, and order of subsequent mutations remain poorly understood, as AML is typically diagnosed without observation of a pre-leukaemic phase. Here, highly purified haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), progenitor and mature cell fractions from the blood of AML patients were found to contain recurrent DNMT3A mutations (DNMT3Amut) at high allele frequency, but without coincident NPM1 mutations (NPM1c) present in AML blasts. DNMT3Amut-bearing HSCs showed a multilineage repopulation advantage over non-mutated HSCs in xenografts, establishing their identity as pre-leukaemic HSCs. Pre-leukaemic HSCs were found in remission samples, indicating that they survive chemotherapy. Therefore DNMT3Amut arises early in AML evolution, probably in HSCs, leading to a clonally expanded pool of pre-leukaemic HSCs from which AML evolves. Our findings provide a paradigm for the detection and treatment of pre-leukaemic clones before the acquisition of additional genetic lesions engenders greater therapeutic resistance.

Source:view more

Keywords:pre-leukaemic,haematopoietic,stem cells

 
^Top
Click Here to submit Your Abstract to get Indexed by NTHRYS