AI Article Synopsis

  • RNA splicing is important for creating protein diversity, and while mutations in splicing factor genes are frequent in hematologic cancers, they're rare in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) affecting less than 20% of patients.
  • A comprehensive bioinformatics approach was utilized to analyze RNA sequencing data, revealing key splicing differences in patients with varying prognoses, even without splicing factor mutations present.
  • The study identified significant alternative splicing events in genes linked to protein translation, which were associated with negative outcomes in AML, leading to a proposed splicing signature that can improve risk assessment in patients.

Article Abstract

Purpose: RNA splicing is a fundamental biological process that generates protein diversity from a finite set of genes. Recurrent somatic mutations of splicing factor genes are common in some hematologic cancers but are relatively uncommon in acute myeloid leukemia (AML, < 20% of patients). We examined whether RNA splicing differences exist in AML, even in the absence of splicing factor mutations.

Experimental Design: We developed a bioinformatics pipeline to study alternative RNA splicing in RNA-sequencing data from large cohorts of patients with AML.

Results: We have identified recurrent differential alternative splicing between patients with poor and good prognosis. These splicing events occurred even in patients without any discernible splicing factor mutations. Alternative splicing recurrently occurred in genes with specific molecular functions, primarily related to protein translation. Developing tools to predict the functional impact of alternative splicing on the translated protein, we discovered that approximately 45% of the splicing events directly affected highly conserved protein domains. Several splicing factors were themselves misspliced and the splicing of their target transcripts were altered. Studying differential gene expression in the same patients, we identified that alternative splicing of protein translation genes in ELN patients resulted in the induction of an integrated stress response and upregulation of inflammation-related genes. Finally, using machine learning techniques, we identified a splicing signature of four genes which refine the accuracy of existing risk prognosis schemes and validated it in a completely independent cohort.

Conclusions: Our discoveries therefore identify aberrant alternative splicing as a molecular feature of adverse AML with clinical relevance..

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-0184DOI Listing

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