4.7 Article

Novel NPM1 exon 5 mutations and gene fusions leading to aberrant cytoplasmic nucleophosmin in AML

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 138, Issue 25, Pages 2696-2701

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021012732

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Funding

  1. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro [18568]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [740230]
  3. ERC [725725]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [725725] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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This study identified mutations in Nucleophosmin (NPM1) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) affecting not only exon 12, but also exons 9, 11, and even exon 5. Novel rearrangements of NPM1 were also discovered. Functional studies showed the importance of cytoplasmic accumulation of NPM1 in leukemogenesis. Additional assays for molecular diagnosis of NPM1-mutated AML are needed.
Nucleophosmin (NPM1) mutations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) affect exon 12, but also sporadically affect exons 9 and 11, causing changes at the protein C-terminal end (tryptophan loss, nuclear export signal [NES] motif creation) that lead to aberrant cytoplasmic NPM1 (NPM1c(+)), detectable by immunohistochemistry. Combining immunohistochemistry and molecular analyses in 929 patients with AML, we found non-exon 12 NPM1 mutations in 5 (1.3%) of 387 NPM1c(+) cases. Besides mutations in exons 9 (n = 1) and 11 (n = 1), novel exon 5 mutations were discovered (n 5 3). Another exon 5 mutation was identified in an additional 141 patients with AML selected for wild-type NPM1 exon 12. Three NPM1 rearrangements (NPM1/RPP30, NPM1/SETBP1, NPM1/CCDC28A) were detected and characterized among 13979 AML samples screened by cytogenetic/fluorescence in situ hybridization and RNA sequencing. Functional studies demonstrated that in AML cases, new NPM1 proteins harbored an efficient extra NES, either newly created or already present in the fusion partner, ensuring its cytoplasmic accumulation. Our findings support NPM1 cytoplasmic relocation as critical for leukemogenesis and reinforce the role of immunohistochemistry in predicting AML-associated NPM1 genetic lesions. This study highlights the need to develop new assays for molecular diagnosis and monitoring of NPM1-mutated AML.

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