Abstract

Homeobox genes play a critical role in embryonic development, but they have also been implicated in cancer through mechanisms that are largely unknown. While not expressed during normal T-cell development, homeobox transcription factor genes can be reactivated via recurrent chromosomal rearrangements in human T-cell acute leukemia/lymphoma (T-ALL), a malignancy often associated with activated Notch and Akt signaling. To address how epigenetic reprogramming via an activated homeobox gene might contribute to T-lymphomagenesis, we investigated a transgenic mouse model with thymocyte-specific overexpression of the Dlx5 homeobox gene. We demonstrate for the first time that Dlx5 induces T-cell lymphomas with high penetrance. Integrated ChIP-seq and mRNA microarray analyses identified Notch1/3 and Irs2 as direct transcriptional targets of Dlx5, a gene signature unique to lymphomas from Lck-Dlx5 mice as compared to T-cell lymphomas from Lck-MyrAkt2 mice, which were previously reported by our group. Moreover, promoter/enhancer studies confirmed that Dlx5 directly transactivates Notch expression. Notch1/3 expression and Irs2-induced Akt signaling were upregulated throughout early stages of T-cell development, which promoted cell survival during β-selection of T lymphocytes. Dlx5 was required for tumor maintenance via its activation of Notch and Akt, as tumor cells were highly sensitive to Notch and Akt inhibitors. Together, these findings provide unbiased genetic and mechanistic evidence that Dlx5 acts as an oncogene when aberrantly expressed in T cells, and that it is a novel discovery that Notch is a direct target of Dlx5. These experimental findings provide mechanistic insights about how reactivation of the Dlx5 gene can drive T-ALL by aberrant epigenetic reprogramming of the T-cell genome.

Highlights

  • Aberrant expression of multiple NK-like (NKL) homeobox transcription factor genes is especially common in human T-cell acute leukemia/lymphoma (T-ALL), a malignancy often associated with activated Notch and Akt signaling [1]

  • While not expressed during normal T-cell development, homeobox transcription factor genes can be reactivated via recurrent chromosomal rearrangements in human T-cell acute leukemia/lymphoma (T-ALL), a malignancy often associated with activated Notch and Akt signaling

  • To address whether Dlx5 itself could represent a direct driving force in T-ALL, and how epigenetic reprogramming via a homeobox gene might contribute to T-lymphomagenesis generally, we generated a transgenic mouse model with thymocyte-specific overexpression of Dlx5, and we found that these Lck-Dlx5 mice develop thymic lymphomas with high penetrance

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Summary

Introduction

Aberrant expression of multiple NK-like (NKL) homeobox transcription factor genes is especially common in human T-cell acute leukemia/lymphoma (T-ALL), a malignancy often associated with activated Notch and Akt signaling [1]. While not expressed during normal T-cell development, NKL genes such as TLX1 (HOX11), TLX2 (HOX11L1), and TLX3 (HOX11L2) may become transcriptionally activated in T-ALL [1]. Many of these developmentally related genes have been implicated oncogenically, due to their reactivation via recurrent clonal chromosomal translocations and inversions. These rearrangements juxtapose T cell receptor regulatory sequences adjacent to homeobox loci such as HOX11 [2] and HOXA10 [3] leading to their upregulation. DLX5 promotes cell proliferation via upregulation of AKT signaling through the direct transactivation of insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS2) [11]

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