Abstract

Infant Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is a poorly-addressed, heterogeneous malignancy distinguished by surprisingly few mutations per patient but accompanied by myriad age-specific translocations. These characteristics make treatment of infant AML challenging. While infant AML is a relatively rare disease, it has enormous impact on families, and in terms of life-years-lost and life limiting morbidities. To better understand the mechanisms that drive infant AML, we performed integrative analyses of genome-wide mRNA, miRNA, and DNA-methylation data in diagnosis-stage patient samples. Here, we report the activation of an onco-fetal B-cell developmental gene regulatory network in infant AML. AML in infants is genomically distinct from AML in older children/adults in that it has more structural genomic aberrations and fewer mutations. Differential expression analysis of ~1500 pediatric AML samples revealed a large number of infant-specific genes, many of which are associated with B cell development and function. 18 of these genes form a well-studied B-cell gene regulatory network that includes the epigenetic regulators BRD4 and POU2AF1, and their onco-fetal targets LIN28B and IGF2BP3. All four genes are hypo-methylated in infant AML. Moreover, micro-RNA Let7a-2 is expressed in a mutually exclusive manner with its target and regulator LIN28B. These findings suggest infant AML may respond to bromodomain inhibitors and immune therapies targeting CD19, CD20, CD22, and CD79A.

Highlights

  • In a recent large-scale study [1], we reported highly significant age-dependent effects in the genomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic profiles of pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

  • We discovered that many of the most significantly up-regulated genes in infant AML are associated with B cell development and function

  • In spite of the genetic heterogeneity among infant AML, this B cell gene regulatory network (GRN) is up-regulated in most infant AML cases, suggesting that its activity is a common feature of infant AML

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Summary

Introduction

In a recent large-scale study [1], we reported highly significant age-dependent effects in the genomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic profiles of pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). AML in infants less than three years of age stands out in this respect. Certain highly penetrant genomic translocations (e.g. CBFA2T3:GLIS2, Fig 1A) occur nearly exclusively in this group. While the prevalence of structural alterations is higher in infants, there are remarkably few single nucleotide variants and indels per patient (Fig 1B and 1C).

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