Abstract

AbstractHuman T-cell leukemia virus 1 (HTLV-1) causes adult T-cell leukemia (ATL), but the mechanism underlying its initiation remains elusive. In this study, ORP4L was expressed in ATL cells but not in normal T-cells. ORP4L ablation completely blocked T-cell leukemogenesis induced by the HTLV-1 oncoprotein Tax in mice, whereas engineering ORP4L expression in T-cells resulted in T-cell leukemia in mice, suggesting the oncogenic properties and prerequisite of ORP4L promote the initiation of T-cell leukemogenesis. For molecular insight, we found that loss of miR-31 caused by HTLV-1 induced ORP4L expression in T-cells. ORP4L interacts with PI3Kδ to promote PI(3,4,5)P3 generation, contributing to AKT hyperactivation; NF-κB–dependent, p53 inactivation-induced pro-oncogene expression; and T-cell leukemogenesis. Consistently, ORP4L ablation eliminates human ATL cells in patient-derived xenograft ATL models. These results reveal a plausible mechanism of T-cell deterioration by HTLV-1 that can be therapeutically targeted.

Highlights

  • ORP4L interacts with PI3Kd to promote PI(3,4,5)P3 generation and AKT activation

  • In a set of mouse models, we showed that ORP4L is a prerequisite for T-cell leukemogenesis induced by human T-cell leukemia virus 1 (HTLV-1) and is essential for survival of T-cell leukemia

  • We provide evidence of a novel initial pathogenic mechanism in which HTLV-1 induces T-cell leukemogenesis through a miR-31 loss/ORP4L gain axis

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Summary

KEY POINTS

Tax-induced T-cell leukemia, whereas engineering ORP4L expression in T cells results in T-cell leukemia in mice. Loss of miR-31 induced by Tax releases ORP4L expression, which initiates T-cell deterioration, but ORP4L inhibition eliminates ATL in PDX mice. ORP4L ablation completely blocked T-cell leukemogenesis induced by the HTLV-1 oncoprotein Tax in mice, whereas engineering ORP4L expression in T-cells resulted in T-cell leukemia in mice, suggesting the oncogenic properties and prerequisite of ORP4L promote the initiation of T-cell leukemogenesis. We found that loss of miR-31 caused by HTLV-1 induced ORP4L expression in T-cells. ORP4L ablation eliminates human ATL cells in patientderived xenograft ATL models. These results reveal a plausible mechanism of T-cell deterioration by HTLV-1 that can be therapeutically targeted

Introduction
Methods
15 KDa 40 KDa
A Cont RNA
Result
Tet O sgRNA
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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