Abstract

The human T-cell leukemia virus-1 (HTLV-1) oncoprotein Tax drives cell proliferation and resistance to apoptosis early in the pathogenesis of adult T-cell leukemia (ATL). Subsequently, probably as a result of specific immunoediting, Tax expression is down-regulated and functionally replaced by somatic driver mutations of the host genome. Both amplification and point mutations of interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) have been previously detected in ATL., K59R is the most common single-nucleotide variation of IRF4 and is found exclusively in ATL. High-throughput whole-exome sequencing revealed recurrent activating genetic alterations in the T-cell receptor, CD28, and NF-κB pathways. We found that IRF4, which is transcriptionally activated downstream of these pathways, is frequently mutated in ATL. IRF4 RNA, protein, and IRF4 transcriptional targets are uniformly elevated in HTLV-1-transformed cells and ATL cell lines, and IRF4 was bound to genomic regulatory DNA of many of these transcriptional targets in HTLV-1-transformed cell lines. We further noted that the K59R IRF4 mutant is expressed at higher levels in the nucleus than WT IRF4 and is transcriptionally more active. Expression of both WT and the K59R mutant of IRF4 from a constitutive promoter in retrovirally transduced murine bone marrow cells increased the abundance of T lymphocytes but not myeloid cells or B lymphocytes in mice. IRF4 may represent a therapeutic target in ATL because ATL cells select for a mutant of IRF4 with higher nuclear expression and transcriptional activity, and overexpression of IRF4 induces the expansion of T lymphocytes in vivo.

Highlights

  • The human T-cell leukemia virus-1 (HTLV-1) oncoprotein Tax drives cell proliferation and resistance to apoptosis early in the pathogenesis of adult T-cell leukemia (ATL)

  • We examined the subcellular localization of interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) in control CD3/CD28-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as well as HTLV-1–transformed MT2, MT4, TL-OM1, and MT1 cells (Fig. 5, A and B)

  • Mutations at K59R and L70V are recurring mutations in ATL and represent the most common mutations of IRF4 identified in the COSMIC database of cancer-associated mutations [22]

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

An activating mutation of interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) in adult T-cell leukemia. Progression to aggressive forms of ATL is marked by decreased Tax expression, decreased transcription from the positive strand of the virus, and proviral DNA methylation or mutation, as a result of Tax-specific immunoediting (18 –21). At this stage, proliferation is sustained by cellular genes, mutated or epigenetically altered by events during leukemia initiation and progression. At the intersection of IRF4 transcriptional targets and ATL– up-regulated genes lies a set of genes that are potential transcriptional targets of IRF4 in ATL and may be critical for maintaining the transformed phenotype downstream of IRF4; these genes may represent additional targets for therapy of IRF4-driven malignancies

Results
Discussion
Cell culture
Subcellular fractionation
PAGE and Western blotting
Genomic DNA sequencing
Full Text
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