Haematologica, Vol 94, Issue 10, 1453-1455 doi:10.3324/haematol.2009.008508
Copyright © 2009 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Myelodysplastic Syndromes |
Low RPS14 expression is common in myelodysplastic syndromes without 5q- aberration and defines a subgroup of patients with prolonged survival
Akos Czibere,
Ingmar Bruns,
Bärbel Junge,
Raminder Singh,
Guido Kobbe,
Rainer Haas,
Ulrich Germing
Department of Hematology, Oncology and Clinical Immunology, Heinrich-Heine-University, Duesseldorf, Germany
Correspondence: Akos Czibere, MD, Department of Haematology, Oncology and Clinical Immunology, Heinrich-Heine-University, Duesseldorf Moorenstraße 5, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany. E-Mail address:Akos.Czibere{at}med.uni-duesseldorf.de

ABSTRACT
To further clarify the role of ribosomal protein S14 (RPS14)
in myelodysplastic syndrome, we examined RPS14 transcription
in bone marrow derived CD34+ cells from patients with non-5q-
myelodysplastic syndrome and found a reduced expression of RPS14
in 51 of 72 (71%) patients. MDS patients with an intermediate-1
risk (INT-1) score according to the international prognostic
scoring system and low RPS14 expression had a superior median
overall survival of not reached versus 25 months compared to
INT-1 patients with high RPS14 expression (
p=0.0249). Using
multivariate analysis, the RPS14 expression status was confirmed
as an independent predictor for survival in INT-1 patients.
Key words: low RPS14, myelodysplastic syndromes, prolonged survival, 5q- aberration.

Introduction
The 5q- syndrome is a hematologic malignancy characterized by
a distinct phenotype and interstitial deletion of the long arm
of chromosome 5.
1,2 One particular clinical feature of patients
with 5q- syndrome is a longer survival compared to patients
with other types of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS).
3 Despite
many candidate genes within the commonly deleted region,
RPS14,
which is an integral part of the 40S ribosomal subunit, could
be identified as a primary candidate gene and its loss may be
causative for the 5q- syndrome.
4 Recently, deletions within
the RPS14 coding region were found in MDS patients without concurrent
cytogenetic aberrations on chromosome 5 (non-5q- MDS).
5 To further
clarify the role of RPS14 in non-5q- MDS, we examined bone marrow
derived CD34
+ selected cells from 72 patients with various types
of non-5q- MDS with regard to their level of
RPS14 gene expression
and its possible prognostic relevance.

Design and Methods
Patient and donor characteristics
All patients examined were diagnosed with MDS at our department
and included in the Duesseldorf MDS Registry. Bone marrow samples
were obtained between 2001 and 2006 according to institutional
guidelines following approval by the local ethics committee.
All 83 patients and 11 normal donors gave written informed consent.
The median age was 70 years (range 38–86 years) and 76
years (range 28–85) for patients and normal donors, respectively.
Fifty patients (61%) were male. MDS types diagnosed according
to WHO classification were as follows: 4 5q- syndrome, one refractory
anemia (RA), one RA with ringsideroblasts (RARS), 17 refractory
cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia (RCMD), 16 ringsideroblastic
RCMD (RSRCMD), 13 RA with excess of blasts (RAEB) I, 15 RAEB
II and 16 secondary acute myeloid leukemia following MDS (sAML).
Overall, 11 patients had deletions on the long arm of chromosome
5 of which 4 had 5q- syndrome and 7 had additional cytogenetic
aberrations (5q- MDS). For prognosis and survival analyses,
only the 72 patients with non-5q- MDS were evaluated. Of these
72 patients, 2 had low, 33 intermediate-1 (INT-1), 13 intermediate-2
(INT-2) and 24 high-risk MDS according to the IPSS. In December
2008 the median follow-up was 24 months (range 1–91 months).
Sample preparation and quantitative RT-PCR
Bone marrow CD34+ cells were selected using immunomagnetic beads as published.6 RNA was purified as described6 and samples were stored at –80°C. For detection and quantification of mRNA levels of RPS14 and GAPDH the LightCycler 1.2 technology (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) was used. PCR reactions were performed using the LightCycler-FastStart DNA Master SYBR Green I kit (Roche). The PCR was carried out in a final volume of 20 µL using 0.5 µM of each primer, 4 mM MgCl2, 2 µL supplied enzyme mix containing the reaction buffer, FastStart Taq DNA polymerase and DNA double-strand specific SYBR Green I dye for the detection of PCR products were used. The PCR protocol was as follows: 480 s preincubation at 95°C; 45 cycles of 15 s at 95°C, 5 s at 63°C and 20 s at 72°C. To test the specifity of the PCR, the reaction products were subjected to melting curve analysis with the LightCycler system and to conventional agarose gel electrophoresis to rule out synthesis of unspecific products. Primer sequences were as follows: RPS14 forward: 5'-ATG TTG GCT GCC CAG-3'; RPS14 reverse: 5'-GGT CTT GGT CCTATT TCC TC3'-; GAPDH forward: 5'-TCC ATG ACA ACT TTG GTA TCG-3'; GAPDH reverse: 5'-GTC GCT GTT GAA GTC AGA GGA-3'. Relative gene expression levels were calculated as the difference of CT values of RPS14 and the housekeeping gene GAPDH as a control (
CT). For each individual MDS patient sample, the respective RPS14 fold of expression was calculated against the mean expression level of the 11 normal donors (
-
CT). To analyze the prognostic relevance of RPS14 expression levels in non-5q- MDS, we dichotomized the patient samples at the median
CT values of the respective IPSS groups and divided them into two RPS14 expression groups: a RPS14 low expression group with
CT values above the median value and an RPS14 high expression group with deltaCT values below the median value. Online Supplementary Figure 1 shows the individual deltaCT values of all 94 samples analyzed.
Statistical methods
Overall survival was calculated from the day of sample collection.
Overall survival was estimated according to the Kaplan-Meier
method. The equality of survival between different groups was
tested using the log-rank test. Prognostic factor analysis was
performed with Coxs multivariate regression method.

Results and Discussion
To test the accuracy of our assay to detect a reduced
RPS14 gene expression level, we first compared
RPS14 mRNA levels in
CD34
+ cells of 11 normal donors and 11 patients with deletions
on the long arm of chromosome 5 (5q- MDS). Here, RPS14 expression
in 5q- MDS patients was reduced by a median fold change of –1.69
(range 3.9 to –7.75) as compared to normal donors (
Online Supplementary Figure 2A). This fold of reduction is perfectly
in line with previous studies analyzing the gene expression
profile of CD34
+ cells from patients with 5q- syndrome in comparison
to normal donors, where a –1.46 fold of reduction of RPS14
expression was reported.
7 We continued our analysis with bone
marrow derived CD34
+ cells from 72 patients with various types
of non-5q- MDS and found a reduced RPS14 expression by at least
–1.5-fold in 51 patients (71%). While 13 of 31 (42%) patients
with early MDS (RA, RARS, RCMD, RS-RCMD) had low RPS14 expression
(
Online Supplementary Figure 2B), the respective proportion
in patients with advanced MDS (RAEB I, RAEB II, sAML) was 93%
(38 out of 41 patients,
Online Supplementary Figure 2C). This
high number of patients with advanced MDS and decreased RPS14
expression might be the result of clonal proliferation with
an increased proportion of presumably RPS14 low expressing CD34
+ blast cells within the whole CD34
+ population as, to this date,
no deletion or mutation of both alleles or pathological hypermethylation
of any of the genes within the commonly deleted region, including
RPS14, could be detected.
8,9 One potential mechanism leading
to the reduced RPS14 expression in patients with non-5q- MDS
without blast excess, may involve small deletions in the gene
encoding RPS14 as recently demonstrated in such patients.
5 A
specific genomic event is the cause for the reduced RPS14 expression
in patients with 5q- syndrome and considering the superior survival
of these patients, we wondered if the RPS14 expression status
may also have prognostic relevance in non-5q- MDS patients.
Therefore, we continued our analysis according to the patients
IPSS risk score, which is a well established prognostic tool
for patients with MDS.
10 When using the respective median deltaCT
values to discriminate RPS14 low and high expressing patients,
we did not find any differences with regard to overall survival
when the analysis was confined to patients with IPSS INT-2 or
high-risk MDS. Interestingly, as far as the 33 INT-1 patients
are concerned, the group of INT-1 patients with low RPS14 expression
(INT-1 low) had not yet reached their median overall survival
in contrast to those INT-1 patients with high RPS14 expression
(INT-1 high) whose median overall survival was 25 months (
p=0.0249).
With a median follow-up of 40 months (range 9–91 months,
Figure 1), a significant survival advantage for patients with
low RPS14 expression and an INT-1 risk score was observed. On
multivariate analysis the RPS14 expression status was identified
as a significant independent predictor for survival in the 33
INT-1 risk patients (
Table 1) analyzed here, indicating that
the RPS14 expression status may be used to separate two distinct
INT-1 risk groups with different prognosis. As it has been shown
that lenalidomide-responsive non-5q- patients have a gene expression
signature, which resembles a defect in erythroid differentiation
11 and that loss of RPS14 expression in CD34
+ cells causes such
a phenotype,
2 one may speculate that the individual RPS14 expression
status might help to identify patients with IPSS intermediate
risk who will most likely respond to treatment with lenalidomide.
Taken together, we confirmed a low RPS14 expression in MDS patients
with 5q- aberrations and found that low RPS14 expression levels
can also be commonly observed in patients without 5q- aberrations.
Of clinical relevance, a low RPS14 expression level is apparently
associated with a favorable prognosis in patients with INT-1
risk MDS.

Footnotes
The online version of this article contains a supplementary
appendix.
Authorship and Disclosures
AC was the principal investigator and takes primary responsibility for the paper; AC, IB, and UG wrote the paper; BJ and RS performed the laboratory work for this study; AC, IB and RH coordinated the research; GK, AC and UG carried out the statistical analysis; RH reviewed the manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Received for publication March 19, 2009.
Revision received April 17, 2009.
Accepted for publication May 6, 2009.

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