4.8 Article

Suppressors and activators of JAK-STAT signaling at diagnosis and relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Down syndrome

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1702489114

Keywords

acute lymphoblastic leukemia; Down syndrome; CRLF2; JAK-STAT signaling; USP9X

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation Legacy grant
  2. Israel Science Foundation
  3. European Union
  4. Israel Cancer Research Fund
  5. Waxman Foundation
  6. William Lawrence and Blanche Hughes foundation
  7. German Israel Foundation
  8. Israel Absorption Ministry
  9. Israel Cancer Association
  10. Children with Cancer UK
  11. Dotan Center for Hematological Malignancies in Tel Aviv University
  12. Dora and Giorgio Shapiro Chair for hematological malignancies, Tel Aviv University
  13. Fondazione Italiana per la Ricerca Sul Cancro
  14. German Consortium of Translational Cancer Research

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Children with Down syndrome (DS) are prone to development of high-risk B-cell precursor ALL (DS-ALL), which differs genetically from most sporadic pediatric ALLs. Increased expression of cytokine receptor-like factor 2 (CRLF2), the receptor to thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP), characterizes about half of DS-ALLs and also a subgroup of sporadic Philadelphia-like ALLs. To understand the pathogenesis of relapsed DS-ALL, we performed integrative genomic analysis of 25 matched diagnosis-remission and - relapse DSALLs. We found that the CRLF2 rearrangements are early events during DS-ALL evolution and generally stable between diagnoses and relapse. Secondary activating signaling events in the JAK-STAT/RAS pathway were ubiquitous but highly redundant between diagnosis and relapse, suggesting that signaling is essential but that no specific mutations are relapse driving. We further found that activated JAK2 may be naturally suppressed in 25% of CRLF2(pos) DSALLs by loss-of-function aberrations in USP9X, a deubiquitinase previously shown to stabilize the activated phosphorylated JAK2. Interrogation of large ALL genomic databases extended our findings up to 25% of CRLF2(pos), Philadelphia-like ALLs. Pharmacological or genetic inhibition of USP9X, as well as treatment with low-dose ruxolitinib, enhanced the survival of pre-B ALL cells overexpressing mutated JAK2. Thus, somehow counterintuitive, we found that suppression of JAK-STAT hypersignaling may be beneficial to leukemic B-cell precursors. This finding and the reduction of JAK mutated clones at relapse suggest that the therapeutic effect of JAK specific inhibitors may be limited. Rather, combined signaling inhibitors or direct targeting of the TSLP receptor may be a useful therapeutic strategy for DS-ALL.

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