4.4 Article

A novel xenograft model to study the role of TSLP-induced CRLF2 signals in normal and malignant human B lymphopoiesis

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages 417-426

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2015.125336

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Funding

  1. NIH [R21CA162259, P20 MD006988, 2R25 GM060507, R01 HL095120]
  2. St. Baldrick's Research Grant
  3. Hyundai Hope on Wheels Scholar Hope Grant
  4. Department of Pathology and Human Anatomy
  5. Department of Basic Sciences
  6. Center for Health Disparities and Molecular Medicine
  7. Loma Linda University
  8. St Baldrick's Foundation Career Development Award
  9. Hyundai Hope on Wheels Scholar Grant Award
  10. Four Diamonds Fund of the Pennsylvania State University
  11. John Wawrynovic Leukemia Research Scholar Endowment

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Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) stimulates in vitro proliferation of human fetal B-cell precursors. However, its in vivo role during normal human B lymphopoiesis is unknown. Genetic alterations that cause overexpression of its receptor component, cytokine receptor-like factor 2 (CRLF2), lead to high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia implicating this signaling pathway in leukemogenesis. We show that mouse thymic stromal lymphopoietin does not stimulate the downstream pathways (JAK/STAT5 and PI3K/AKT/mTOR) activated by the human cytokine in primary high-risk leukemia with overexpression of the receptor component. Thus, the utility of classic patient-derived xenografts for in vivo studies of this pathway is limited. We engineered xenograft mice to produce human thymic stromal lymphopoietin (+T mice) by injection with stromal cells transduced to express the cytokine. Control (-T) mice were produced using stroma transduced with control vector. Normal levels of human thymic stromal lymphopoietin were achieved in sera of +T mice, but were undetectable in -T mice. Patient-derived xenografts generated from +T as compared to -T mice showed a 3-6-fold increase in normal human B-cell precursors that was maintained through later stages of B-cell development. Gene expression profiles in high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia expanded in +T mice indicate increased mTOR pathway activation and are more similar to the original patient sample than those from -T mice. +T/-T xenografts provide a novel pre-clinical model for understanding this pathway in B lymphopoiesis and identifying treatments for high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia with overexpression of cytokine-like factor receptor 2.

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