Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia |
1 Charité, University Hospital Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Department of Hematology and Oncology, Berlin, Germany
2 University Frankfurt am Main, Department of Hematology and Oncology, Frankfurt/Main, Germany
3 Charité, University Hospital Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Department of Biostatistics and Clinical Epidemiology, Berlin, Germany
4 The Ohio State University, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbus, OH, USA
Correspondence: Claudia D Baldus, M.D., Charité, University Hospital Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Department of Hematology and Oncology, Hindenburgdamm 30 12203 Berlin, Germany. E-mail:claudia.baldus{at}charite.de
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Design and Methods: Here we have investigated the prognostic impact of mutations in the NOTCH1 pathway, in particular, the NOTCH1 and FBXW7 genes, in a large cohort of adult patients with T-lymphoblastic leukemia (n=126). We determined the occurrence of mutations in NOTCH1 and FBXW7 by DNA amplification and direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction products.
Results: Mutations were identified in 57% and 12% of the NOTCH1 and FBXW7 genes, respectively. The characteristics of patients carrying NOTCH1 and/or FBXW7 (NOTCH1-FBXW7) mutations were similar to those with wild-type genes. Patients with NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutations more often showed a thymic immunophenotype (p=0.001). In the overall cohort, no significant differences were seen in the complete remission or event-free survival rates between patients with mutated or wild-type NOTCH1-FBXW7 (p=0.39).
Conclusions: NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations were not predictive of outcome in the overall cohort of adult patients with T-lymphoblastic leukemia, but there was a trend towards a favorable prognostic impact of NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutations in the small subgroup of patients with low-risk ERG/BAALC expression status. Our findings further confirm the high frequency of NOTCH1 mutations in adult T-lymphoblastic leukemia.
Key words: acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia, NOTCH1, FBXW7, mutations.
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The NOTCH1 gene was initially found to be involved in the rare t(7;9)(q34;q34.3) in T-ALL.7 Subsequently, activating NOTCH1 mutations were identified in 56% of pediatric T-ALL patients, including mutations in the heterodimerization (HD) domain, the polypeptide enriched proline, glutamate, serine and threonine (PEST) domain, and in the transactivation domain (TAD).8,9 Mutations in the HD domain are proposed to destabilize the protein, likely conferring ligand-independent pathway activation, whereas mutations in the PEST domain result in an increased half-life of the transcriptionally active intracellular NOTCH1 (ICN1) fragment.8,10 Recently, internal duplication insertions leading to expansion in the extracellular juxtamembrane region have been found to be a novel mechanism of NOTCH1 activation in 3.3% of cases of T-ALL.11 While NOTCH1 signaling is essential for the development of normal T-cell progenitors, constitutive activation of NOTCH1 signaling by mutational events has been linked to T-cell leukemogenesis and direct evidence of its pathogenetic role has been provided by murine models that showed the induction of T-cell malignancies in mice carrying NOTCH1 mutations.12,13
The tumor suppressor FBXW7 targets proteins for proteosomal degradation and has been shown to suppress NOTCH1 signaling by ubiquitination of the ICN1 fragment.14,15 Mutations in FBXW7 have been identified in T-lymphoblastic cell lines as well as in primary T-ALL samples and were found to abrogate NOTCH1 binding, thereby enhancing NOTCH1 signaling. Moreover, studies have demonstrated that mutations in FBXW7 mediate resistance to gamma-secretase inhibitors.16,17 In addition, FBXW7 recognizes other substrates for ubiquitination including CYCLIN E, c-MYC, and JUN; thus, in addition to enhancing NOTCH1 signaling, FBXW7 mutations may also affect other oncogenic pathways.
To date, clinical studies have predominately investigated pediatric T-ALL and reported NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations in 56% and 12% of cases, respectively.8,16–20 Interestingly, in one study, a mutated NOTCH1 status was associated with a better response to pred-nisone, a lower level of minimal residual disease, and a higher event-free survival rate.18 In contrast, in adult TALL, few data are available on the frequency21 or the prognostic impact of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations, with one study (including only 24 adult T-ALL patients) reporting an inferior outcome for patients with NOTCH1 mutations.20 Since the results from pediatric and adult T-ALL mutation analyses remain controversial, larger studies are necessary to determine the prognostic and therapeutic relevance of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations in adult T-ALL. Thus, we evaluated NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutation status in a large number of adult T-ALL patients enrolled on German Multicentre Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (GMALL) protocols and related the mutation status to clinical characteristics and molecular markers.
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Immunophenotypic analyses
Pre-treatment bone marrow samples were collected centrally. The blast fraction of the samples was enriched by density-gradient centrifugation (Ficoll-Paque Plus, Amersham Biosciences, Uppsala, Sweden) and stored in liquid nitrogen. Immunophenotyping of fresh samples was performed centrally in the GMALL reference laboratory at the Charité, University Hospital Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Germany. Immuno-phenotyping was carried out as previously described.23,25 T-lineage leukemia was subclassified into pre-T-ALL or early T-ALL (cyCD3+, CD7+, CD5+/–, CD2–, sCD3–, CD4–/+, CD8–/+, CD1a– or cyCD3+, CD7+, CD5–, CD2+, sCD3–, CD4–, CD8–, CD1a–), thymic T-ALL (cyCD3+, CD7+, CD5+/–, CD2+/–, sCD3+/–, CD4+, CD8+, CD1a+), and mature T-ALL (cyCD3+, CD7+, CD5+, CD2+, sCD3+/–, CD4+/–, CD8+/–, CD1a–).
DNA isolation and NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutation analyses
Genomic DNA from pre-treatment bone marrow samples was isolated using the PureGene kit (Gentra Systems; Plymouth, USA) following the manufacturers instructions. NOTCH1 mutations in the N-terminal region of the HD domain (HD-N; hotspot of mutations: bp 4724–4829), the C-terminal region (HD-C; hotspot of mutations: bp 5029–5222), the TAD, and the PEST domain were determined by direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified products.8 The PEST domain was divided into a N-terminal PEST-1 (hotspot of mutations: bp 7255–7330) region and a C-terminal PEST-2 (hotspot of mutations: bp 7525–7558) region, the latter region includes the FBXW7 binding site. Sufficient material for the analyses of the FBXW7 mutation status was available for 112 of the 126 patients. Sequencing of the amplified PCR products of exons 8 and 9 was carried out as previously described.26 As a control, bone marrow samples from six healthy volunteers were included and no mutations were detected.
Molecular characterization by gene expression analyses
mRNA expression levels of the genes HOX11, HOX11L2, BAALC, and ERG were determined by comparative real-time reverse transcriptase-PCR as previously reported.27,28
Statistical analysis
Comparisons of baseline clinical variables across groups were made using the
2 Fishers exact test for categorical data. The non-parametric Mann-Whitney U test was applied for quantitative variables. A p value of 0.05 or less (two-sided) was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference.
Clinical follow-up data were available from 108 of the 126 T-ALL patients with a median follow-up time of 20.5 months (range, 0.5 to 81.2 months). Complete remission (CR) was assessed after completion of induction chemotherapy and required a granulocyte count of 1.5x109/L or more, a platelet count of 100x109/L or more, without peripheral blood blasts, bone marrow cellularity greater than 20% with maturation of all cell lines, less than 5% bone marrow blasts, and absence of extramedullary leukemia. Relapse was defined as the reappearance of circulating blasts, more than 5% bone marrow blasts, or development of extramedullary leukemia. Event-free survival was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test was used to compare differences between survival curves. Event-free survival was measured from the date of starting the study protocol until the date of death of any cause or relapse or failure to achieve complete remission.
In order to identify independent prognostic factors and effect modifiers (i.e. interactions between different factors), Cox proportional hazards models were constructed for event-free survival. The following co-variates were included in the full model: BAALC/ERG expression status (low-risk versus high-risk), HOX11 and HOX11L2 expression (presence versus absence), white blood count, age, immunophenotype (early, thymic, mature), NOTCH1/FBXW7 mutation status (wild-type NOTCH1 and FBXW7 versus mutated NOTCH1 and/or FBXW7), and BAALC/ERG as an effect modifier for NOTCH1/FBXW7. Stepwise forward and backward selection was performed. All calculations were performed using the SPSS software package, version 15 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).
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Table 1. Frequency of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations in adult T-ALL.
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Association of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations with molecular and clinical characteristics
As NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations affect the same signaling pathway, patients with mutations in the NOTCH1 and/or FBXW7 gene were grouped into a combined NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated group. With respect to clinical parameters no significant differences were seen between NOTCH1-FBXW7 wild-type and NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated patients (Table 2). There was no significant correlation between the mRNA expression of the previously characterized molecular markers with prognostic significance including HOX11, HOX11L2, BAALC and ERG (Table 2) and NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutation status.
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Table 2. Association of NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutation status with clinical and molecular characteristics in adult T-ALL.
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Figure 1. Association between mutation status and the expression of surface antigens. Y-axis of the box-plots depicts the expression (in percent) of the surface antigen as determined by flow cytometry.
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Table 3. Impact of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutation status on survival in adult T-ALL.
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Figure 2. Kaplan Meier analyses of event-free survival of patients with mutated NOTCH1-FBXW7 compared to patients with wild-type NOTCH1-FBXW7.
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Figure 3. Kaplan-Meier analyses of event-free survival within ERG/BAALC expression groups. (A) Within the ERG/BAALC low-risk group, patients with wild-type NOTCH1-FBXW7 had a poorer event-free survival compared to patients with mutated NOTCH1-FBXW7. (B) In the subset of the ERG/BAALC high-risk group no significant difference was seen in event-free survival between NOTCH1-FBXW7 wild-type and NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated patients.
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Table 4. Impact of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutation status on survival in adult T-ALL according to ERG/BAALC expression.
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In the current study, we observed no significant prognostic implications of NOTCH1 or FBXW7 mutations with respect to the complete remission rate and event-free survival among the overall cohort of adult T-ALL patients; no impact was seen within defined subgroups based on HOX11 or HOX11L2 expression or immunophenotype. In an exploratory subgroup analysis within the favorable-risk group characterized by low expression of ERG and/or BAALC, patients with wild-type NOTCH1-FBXW7 had a worse outcome than patients with NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutations. However, the analyses remain limited due to the small sample size. In contrast, no outcome differences were seen between NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated and NOTCH1-FBXW7 wild-type cases in high-risk ERG/BAALC patients.
The discrepancies between pediatric and adult T-ALL may reflect differences in the molecular background of the disease, selection of patients and the treatment protocols used.5 Whereas ERG and BAALC expression was not reported in the pediatric cohort, the distribution of the immunophenotype differed slightly from that in adults, with 79% of pediatric NOTCH1 mutated cases exhibiting the more favorable thymic phenotype as compared to 65% in our adult T-ALL cohort. In accordance with the high prevalence of NOTCH1 mutations in pediatric T-ALL we found mutations in 57% of adult T-ALL cases localized in the known hot spots of the HD and PEST domains and identified novel mutations in the TAD. Indeed, the majority of mutations (62%) described here have not yet been reported, highlighting the wide variation of NOTCH1 mutations and potential molecular differences between pediatric and adult T-ALL.21
The position and type of the new mutations identified in adult T-ALL were similar to those found in childhood T-ALL and likely result in equivalent functional consequences of NOTCH1 activation.
Mutations in the conserved FBXW7-binding pocket (residues R465, R479, and R505) have been shown to abrogate NOTCH1 binding, thereby enhancing NOTCH1 activity.16,17 About 12% of pediatric T-ALL patients had FBXW7 mutations at initial diagnosis.16 We identified FBXW7 mutations in a similar percentage of cases of adult T-ALL (12%). FBXW7 mutations have been primarily associated with the HD domain, resulting in signal amplification, whereas FBXW7 mutations in the PEST domain are less frequent.16,17,31 It has been proposed that mutations in the PEST domain relieve mutational pressure on FBXW7 as a marginal selective advantage would be gained by FBXW7 mutations in the context of existing PEST deletions.15 In contrast to studies in pediatric T-ALL, which found no co-existing mutations in the NOTCH1 PEST domain and the FBXW7 gene,16,17 we identified two patients (ID 88, ID 96) with combined PEST and FBXW7 mutations. In patient 96 the point mutation in the PEST-2 region was C-terminal to the proposed FBXW7-NOTCH1 T2512 interaction residue. In addition to the FBXW7 and PEST-1 mutations, patient 88 carried a mutation in the HD domain.
High expression of ERG and BAALC has been associated with an immature leukemic phenotype.27 Our preliminary data suggesting that NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated status is associated with a favorable outcome only in the low-risk ERG/BAALC group might indicate a molecularly more differentiated leukemic stage with high susceptibility to anti-proliferative therapy. Leukemic blasts from T-ALL patients with mutated, thus activated, NOTCH1 signaling displayed a more mature phenotype and demonstrated a genotype-phenotype association as distinct surface marker expression correlated with mutations in specific NOTCH1 domains. This genotype-phenotype correlation suggests that a specific cell type might be prone to acquire certain mutational events (HD-N, PEST-1) and this may indicate that mutations preferentially occur in cells at different stages of differentiation. Interestingly, irrespective of the NOTCH1 mutation status, FBXW7 mutations were also associated with a more mature T-lymphoblast phenotype arrested at the CD4 and CD8 double positive and the CD8 single positive state.32 In contrast, patients with high-risk ERG/BAALC as well as wild-type NOTCH1-FBXW7 tended to be in a molecularly undifferentiated stage, which is likely to confer chemotherapy resistance.
NOTCH1 mutations are an ideal target for pharmacological interventions, e. g. gamma-secretase inhibitors that prevent the generation of the ICN1 fragment and thereby suppress NOTCH1 activity.33 Importantly, mutations in FBXW7 have been associated with resistance to gamma-secretase inhibitor treatment, as disruption of FBXW7 function will maintain NOTCH1 signaling.17 Therefore, the identification of FBXW7 mutations in 12% of all patients and in 64% of cases with mutated NOTCH1 signaling needs to be taken into account when choosing targeted therapies. As for other leukemic subtypes, tailoring the therapeutic approaches based on the molecular alteration is critical for treatment optimization in T-ALL. Whether low-risk patients characterized by low ERG/BAALC expression exhibiting a NOTCH1-FBXW7 mutated status might benefit from gamma-secretase inhibitor-based therapy and be spared intensified chemotherapy regimes should be explored in future studies including an even larger cohort of patients.
The complexity of NOTCH1 signaling is further highlighted by the recent identification of juxtamembrane expansion mutations. However, due to the low frequency of these mutations studies including even more TALL patients will be necessary to evaluate their prognostic impact. Moreover, PTEN mutations can be identified in about 8% of patients with newly diagnosed TALL. It has been proposed that resistance to gamma-secretase inhibitor-mediated inhibition of NOTCH1 signaling in T-ALL with PTEN loss of function mutations is a result of uninhibited AKT activation, leading to aberrant proliferation signaling.34 Recent approaches combining gamma-secretase inhibitors with glucocorticoids have been shown to overcome glucocoriticoid resistance in T-ALL and indicate that beneficial effects of gamma-secretase inhibitors can be obtained by concurrent treatment with other antileukemic drugs.35
In summary, molecular characterization of T-ALL should include immunophenotyping, since patients with thymic CD1a-positive T-ALL have a distinctly favorable outcome. Novel molecular markers with prognostic implications including HOX11L2, ERG, and BAALC, once confirmed in prospective studies, may help to filter out patients with high-risk thymic T-ALL who would potentially benefit from more intensive therapy. Mutational analyses of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 are, at present, still exploratory. Recently, Asfani et al. showed a favorable prognostic impact of NOTCH1 and FBXW7 mutations in adult T-ALL.36 Since biological and clinical differences of cases might account, in part, for the differences in results between studies, sequencing of mutations should be considered in future trials to prospectively validate their prognostic impact in adult T-ALL. Furthermore, the future use of specific inhibitors of activated NOTCH1 may be based on the mutational profile within the NOTCH1 signaling pathway.
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CDB conducted the study, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the manuscript. JT performed the laboratory work. NG and DH provided the clinical data and were involved in the data analyses. AS performed the statistical analysis. CS and MM contributed to the laboratory work. TB and SS provided molecular data. CD Bloomfield was involved in the data analysis and writing of the manuscript. ET co-ordinated the research. WKH contributed to the analysis and to the writing of this manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Funding: supported by grants from the Berliner Krebsgesellschaft and the Deutsche Krebshilfe (Max Eder Nachwuchsförderung) to CD Baldus.
Received for publication December 29, 2008. Revision received May 12, 2009. Accepted for publication May 13, 2009.
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-secretase inhibitors, and cancer therapy. Cancer Res 2007;67:1879–82; 34.
-secretase inhibitors reverse glucocorticoid resistance in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Nat Med 2009;15:50–8.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]Related Article
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