4.4 Article

The significance of PTEN and AKT aberrations in pediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA-THE HEMATOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 97, Issue 9, Pages 1405-1413

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2011.059030

Keywords

pediatric T-ALL; PTEN; AKT; NOTCH1; gamma-secretase resistance; outcome

Categories

Funding

  1. Children Cancer Free Foundation (Stichting Kinderen Kankervrij (KiKa))
  2. Erasmus University Trustfonds foundation
  3. Children Cancer Free Foundation [KIKA2007-012, KIKA2008-029, AMC2008-4265]

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Background PI3K/AKT pathway mutations are found in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but their overall impact and associations with other genetic aberrations is unknown. PTEN mutations have been proposed as secondary mutations that follow NOTCH1-activating mutations and cause cellular resistance to gamma-secretase inhibitors. Design and Methods The impact of PTEN, PI3K and AKT aberrations was studied in a genetically well-characterized pediatric T-cell leukemia patient cohort (n=146) treated on DCOG or COALL protocols. Results PTEN and AKT E17K aberrations were detected in 13% and 2% of patients, respectively. Defective PTEN-splicing was identified in incidental cases. Patients without PTEN protein but lacking exon-, splice-, promoter mutations or promoter hypermethylation were present. PTEN/AKT mutations were especially abundant in TAL- or LMO-rearranged leukemia but nearly absent in TLX3-rearranged patients (P=0.03), the opposite to that observed for NOTCH1-activating mutations. Most PTEN/AKT mutant patients either lacked NOTCH1-activating mutations (P=0.006) or had weak NOTCH1-activating mutations (P=0.011), and consequently expressed low intracellular NOTCH1, cMYC and MUSASHI levels. T-cell leukemia patients without PTEN/AKT and NOTCH1-activating mutations fared well, with a cumulative incidence of relapse of only 8% versus 35% for PTEN/AKT and/or NOTCH1-activated patients (P=0.005). Conclusions PI3K/AKT pathway aberrations are present in 18% of pediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients. Absence of strong NOTCH1-activating mutations in these cases may explain cellular insensitivity to gamma-secretase inhibitors.

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