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Acute T-cell leukemias remain dependent on Notch signaling despite PTEN and INK4A/ARF loss. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • NOTCH1 mutations are present in over 50% of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias, making it a potential target for therapy as its inhibition leads to cell growth arrest.
  • Studies have shown that PTEN loss, which occurs in about 20% of cases, was previously thought to contribute to resistance against Notch inhibitors, but new research challenges this notion.
  • In a mouse model, primary leukemias remained reliant on NOTCH1 signaling regardless of PTEN status, suggesting a collaboration between NOTCH1 activation and PTEN loss in leukemia development, and revealing no correlation between PTEN status and resistance to Notch inhibition in human samples.

Article Abstract

NOTCH1 is activated by mutation in more than 50% of human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs) and inhibition of Notch signaling causes cell-cycle/growth arrest, providing rationale for NOTCH1 as a therapeutic target. The tumor suppressor phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is also mutated or lost in up to 20% of cases. It was recently observed among human T-ALL cell lines that PTEN loss correlated with resistance to Notch inhibition, raising concern that patients with PTEN-negative disease may fail Notch inhibitor therapy. As these studies were limited to established cell lines, we addressed this issue using a genetically defined mouse retroviral transduction/bone marrow transplantation model and observed primary murine leukemias to remain dependent on NOTCH1 signaling despite Pten loss, with or without additional deletion of p16(Ink4a)/p19(Arf). We also examined 13 primary human T-ALL samples obtained at diagnosis and found no correlation between PTEN status and resistance to Notch inhibition. Furthermore, we noted in the mouse model that Pten loss accelerated disease onset and produced multiclonal tumors, suggesting NOTCH1 activation and Pten loss may collaborate in leukemia induction. Thus, in contrast to previous findings with established cell lines, these results indicate PTEN loss does not relieve primary T-ALL cells of their "addiction" to Notch signaling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2826229PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2009-04-214718DOI Listing

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