Abstract

ALK inhibitor crizotinib has shown potent antitumor activity in children with refractory Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma (ALCL) and the opportunity to include ALK inhibitors in first-line therapies is oncoming. However, recent studies suggest that crizotinib-resistance mutations may emerge in ALCL patients. In the present study, we analyzed ALK kinase domain mutational status of 36 paediatric ALCL patients at diagnosis to identify point mutations and gene aberrations that could impact on NPM-ALK gene expression, activity and sensitivity to small-molecule inhibitors. Amplicon ultra-deep sequencing of ALK kinase domain detected 2 single point mutations, R335Q and R291Q, in 2 cases, 2 common deletions of exon 23 and 25 in all the patients, and 7 splicing-related INDELs in a variable number of them. The functional impact of missense mutations and INDELs was evaluated. Point mutations were shown to affect protein kinase activity, signalling output and drug sensitivity. INDELs, instead, generated kinase-dead variants with dominant negative effect on NPM-ALK kinase, in virtue of their capacity of forming non-functional heterocomplexes. Consistently, when co-expressed, INDELs increased crizotinib inhibitory activity on NPM-ALK signal processing, as demonstrated by the significant reduction of STAT3 phosphorylation. Functional changes in ALK kinase activity induced by both point mutations and structural rearrangements were resolved by molecular modelling and dynamic simulation analysis, providing novel insights into ALK kinase domain folding and regulation. Therefore, these data suggest that NPM-ALK pre-therapeutic mutations may be found at low frequency in ALCL patients. These mutations occur randomly within the ALK kinase domain and affect protein activity, while preserving responsiveness to crizotinib.

Highlights

  • Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma (ALCL) represents a distinct subset of T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), accounting for about 10–15% of childhood lymphomas [1]

  • Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) kinase domain mutational status was investigated in ALCL tumour specimens by 454 amplicon ultra-deep sequencing

  • About 99,000 sequences aligned with ALK exons 22–25 were obtained and an overall of 686 sequence variants, 300 SNPs and 386 INDELs, were detected by Roche Amplicon Variant Analyzer (AVA) software

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Summary

Introduction

Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma (ALCL) represents a distinct subset of T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), accounting for about 10–15% of childhood lymphomas [1]. The relative rarity of this tumour has limited the number of large prospective clinical trials for treatment optimization, and current therapeutic strategies are still based on the use of combined intensive chemotherapy. Despite current treatments achieve an event-free survival around 75%, the outcome of relapsed patients is less than 60% [2] and more effective therapeutic strategies are demanding. Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) is a receptor tyrosine kinase that was originally described in t(2;5)(p23;q35)-positive ALCL as part of the NPM-ALK fusion protein [3]. The physiological function and regulation of full-length ALK receptor is still poorly characterized, aberrant expression of constitutively activated NPM-ALK has been clearly established as the leading cause of ALK-positive ALCL [4]. Compelling studies have indicated that all these malignancies are partially or fully dependent on ALK kinase activity for proliferation and survival [7,8,9], as inhibition of ALK or downregulation of its expression yields potent anti-tumour efficacy both in vitro and in vivo [10]

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