4.4 Article

Whole exome sequencing reveals NOTCH1 mutations in anaplastic large cell lymphoma and points to Notch both as a key pathway and a potential therapeutic target

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 106, Issue 6, Pages 1693-1704

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2019.238766

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia [74497]
  2. Bloodwise [12065]
  3. Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge Pathology Centenary Fund PhD studentship
  4. European Union Horizon 2020 Marie SklodowskaCurie Innovative Training Network (ITN-ETN) grant [675712]
  5. Czech Science Foundation [19-23424Y]
  6. research infrastructure EATRIS-CZ [LM2015064]
  7. research infrastructure NCMG - MEYS CR [LM2015091]
  8. KinderkrebsInitiative Buchholz, HolmSeppensen
  9. Cancer Research UK
  10. CCLG

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This study identified a variant in the extracellular domain of NOTCH1 in ALCL patients, demonstrating that the Notch pathway is a viable second-line druggable target for ALK(+) ALCL.
Patients diagnosed with anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) are still treated with toxic multi-agent chemotherapy and as many as 25-50% of patients relapse. To understand disease pathology and to uncover novel targets for therapy, we performed whole-exome sequencing of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)(+) ALCL, as well as gene-set enrichment analysis. This revealed that the T-cell receptor and Notch pathways were the most enriched in mutations. In particular, variant T349P of NOTCH1, which confers a growth advantage to cells in which it is expressed, was detected in 12% of ALK(+) and ALK(-) ALCL patients' samples. Furthermore, we demonstrated that NPM-ALK promotes NOTCH1 expression through binding of STAT3 upstream of NOTCH1. Moreover, inhibition of NOTCH1 with gamma-secretase inhibitors or silencing by short hairpin RNA leads to apoptosis; co-treatment in vitro with the ALK inhibitor crizotinib led to additive/synergistic antitumor activity suggesting that this may be an appropriate combination therapy for future use in the circumvention of ALK inhibitor resistance. Indeed, crizotinib-resistant and -sensitive ALCL were equally sensitive to gamma-secretase inhibitors. In conclusion, we show a variant in the extracellular domain of NOTCH1 that provides a growth advantage to cells and confirm the suitability of the Notch pathway as a second-line druggable target in ALK(+) ALCL.

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