Abstract

Normal early human B-cell development from lymphoid progenitors in the bone marrow depends on instructions from elements in that microenvironment that include stromal cells and factors secreted by these cells including the extracellular matrix. Glycosylation is thought to play a key role in such interactions. The sialyltransferase ST6Gal1, with high expression in specific hematopoietic cell types, is the only enzyme thought to catalyze the terminal addition of sialic acids in an α2-6-linkage to galactose on N-glycans in such cells. Expression of ST6Gal1 increases as B cells undergo normal B-lineage differentiation. B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemias (BCP-ALLs) with differentiation arrest at various stages of early B-cell development have widely different expression levels of ST6GAL1 at diagnosis, with high ST6Gal1 in some but not in other relapses. We analyzed the consequences of increasing ST6Gal1 expression in a diagnosis sample using lentiviral transduction. NSG mice transplanted with these BCP-ALL cells were monitored for survival. Compared to mice transplanted with leukemia cells expressing original ST6Gal1 levels, increased ST6Gal1 expression was associated with significantly reduced survival. A cohort of mice was also treated for 7 weeks with vincristine chemotherapy to induce remission and then allowed to relapse. Upon vincristine discontinuation, relapse was detected in both groups, but mice transplanted with ST6Gal1 overexpressing BCP-ALL cells had an increased leukemia burden and shorter survival than controls. The BCP-ALL cells with higher ST6Gal1 were more resistant to long-term vincristine treatment in an ex vivo tissue co-culture model with OP9 bone marrow stromal cells. Gene expression analysis using RNA-seq showed a surprisingly large number of genes with significantly differential expression, of which approximately 60% increased mRNAs, in the ST6Gal1 overexpressing BCP-ALL cells. Pathways significantly downregulated included those involved in immune cell migration. However, ST6Gal1 knockdown cells also showed increased insensitivity to chemotherapy. Our combined results point to a context-dependent effect of ST6Gal1 expression on BCP-ALL cells, which is discussed within the framework of its activity as an enzyme with many N-linked glycoprotein substrates.

Highlights

  • B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) is a collective name for leukemias with differentiation arrest at various stages of early B-cell development

  • We found increased levels of sialylated N-glycans, including a2-6 sialic acid-linked glycoconjugates, in the leukemia samples despite a downregulation of ST6GAL1 on a transcript level [25]. We considered that such higher levels of N-linked a2-6 Sia in primary BCP-ALL cells could have functional consequences, but a possible contribution of ST6Gal1 to BCPALL has not been examined

  • BCP-ALL Cells Have Extensive a2,6 Sialylation With High but Varying Levels of ST6GAL1 mRNA Expression a2-6 sialylation can be detected by the lectin Sambucus nigra (SNA)

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Summary

Introduction

B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) is a collective name for leukemias with differentiation arrest at various stages of early B-cell development. Owing to extensive molecular analysis including gene expression and DNA sequencing, it is possible to distinguish up to 23 different subcategories of BCP-ALL [1]. Very little is known regarding the glycome of such leukemias. Glycosylation is a dynamic and highly abundant protein post-translational modification in which glycans are attached to proteins or lipids by controlled biosynthetic pathways. Glycoproteins and glycolipids are major constituents of the cell surface glycocalyx, the major zone involved in all intercellular interactions. Glycosylation is applied by the consecutive and controlled action of numerous glycosyltransferases located in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi stack. Main sites of glycan attachment in glycoproteins are at serine/threonine [O-glycans] or asparagine [N-glycans] residues [2]

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