Abstract

BackgroundChildhood leukemia is characterized by the presence of balanced chromosomal translocations or by other structural or numerical chromosomal changes. It is well know that leukemias with specific molecular abnormalities display profoundly different global gene expression profiles. However, it is largely unknown whether such subtype-specific leukemic signatures are unique or if they are active also in non-hematopoietic normal tissues or in other human cancer types.MethodsUsing gene set enrichment analysis, we systematically explored whether the transcriptional programs in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and myeloid leukemia (AML) were significantly similar to those in different flow-sorted subpopulations of normal hematopoietic cells (n = 8), normal non-hematopoietic tissues (n = 22) or human cancer tissues (n = 13).ResultsThis study revealed that e.g., the t(12;21) [ETV6-RUNX1] subtype of ALL and the t(15;17) [PML-RARA] subtype of AML had transcriptional programs similar to those in normal Pro-B cells and promyelocytes, respectively. Moreover, the 11q23/MLL subtype of ALL showed similarities with non-hematopoietic tissues. Strikingly however, most of the transcriptional programs in the other leukemic subtypes lacked significant similarity to ~100 gene sets derived from normal and malignant tissues.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates, for the first time, that the expression profiles of childhood leukemia are largely unique, with limited similarities to transcriptional programs active in normal hematopoietic cells, non-hematopoietic normal tissues or the most common forms of human cancer. In addition to providing important pathogenetic insights, these findings should facilitate the identification of candidate genes or transcriptional programs that can be used as unique targets in leukemia.

Highlights

  • Childhood leukemia is characterized by the presence of balanced chromosomal translocations or by other structural or numerical chromosomal changes

  • We have extended our earlier observations by systematically exploring whether the transcriptional programs in various genetic subtypes of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) show any significant similarities to those present in an enlarged set of flowsorted normal hematopoietic cells, a large number of normal non-hematopoietic tissues, or different types of human cancer

  • Using gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) [14], which provides a powerful tool to ascertain whether a given gene set is significantly enriched in a list of genes ranked by their correlation with a phenotype of interest [14,15], we systematically explored whether differentially expressed genes in the various subtypes of childhood leukemia display enrichment of genes found differentially expressed in different normal and malignant tissues

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood leukemia is characterized by the presence of balanced chromosomal translocations or by other structural or numerical chromosomal changes. It is well know that leukemias with specific molecular abnormalities display profoundly different global gene expression profiles. It is largely unknown whether such subtype-specific leukemic signatures are unique or if they are active in non-hematopoietic normal tissues or in other human cancer types. Childhood leukemia is the most common pediatric malignancy It is typically characterized by balanced chromosomal translocations that form oncogenic fusion genes or by other structural or numerical chromosomal changes. Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is characterized by the following specific alterations: t(12;21)(p13;q22) [ETV6/RUNX1], high hyperdiploidy (HeH, >50 chromosomes), t(1;19)(q23;p13) [TCF3/PBX1], and t(9;22)(q34;q22) [BCR/ABL1], whereas acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is characterized by t(8;21)(q22;q22) [RUNX1/RUNX1T1], t(15;17)(q22; q21) [PML/RARA], and inv(16)(p13q22) [CBFB/

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