Abstract

Understanding the heterogeneous genetic mechanisms of tumor initiation in lymphoid leukemias (LL) will lead to improvements in prognostic classification and treatment regimens. In previous studies of mouse leukemias, we showed that retroviral insertion at the Evi32 locus leads to increased expression of Prdm14, a pluripotency gene implicated in the self-renewal capacity of embryonic stem cells and the early stages of breast cancer. Here we show that PRDM14 is also overexpressed in ~25% of human lymphoid neoplasms, with increased frequencies in T-cell acute LL (T-ALL) and hyperdiploid precursor B-cell acute LL (pre-B ALL). To test if Prdm14 overexpression could initiate leukemia, mice were transduced with bone marrow (BM) cells transfected with a Prdm14 expression vector. Lymphoid leukemias developed in 96% of female mice and 42% of male mice. Prior to the onset of leukemia, differentiation of transduced cells was biased up to 1000-fold towards cells with features of common lymphoid progenitors (CLP), and lymphoid differentiation showed a relative block at the pro-B stage. Microarray gene expression analysis of expanded CLP-like cells prior to the onset of leukemia demonstrated upregulation of genes involved in pluripotency, tumor initiation, early B-lineage commitment, Wnt/Ras signaling, and the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Among the dysregulated genes were imprinted genes and non-coding RNAs including Dlk1 and Meg3, which are also key pluripotency mediators. Heightened expression of the estrogen-dependent oncogene, Myb, in tumors suggests a basis for the increased frequency of cancer in female mice. These data provide the first direct evidence for the association of Prdm14 with cancer initiation in an in vivo mouse model and in human lymphoid malignancies, while suggesting mechanisms for Prdm14’s mode of action.

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