Abstract 1393

The oncoprotein E2A-PBX1 is produced by t(1;19)(q23;p13) in pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Perplexingly, in vitro and in vivo models of E2A-PBX1 leukemogenesis to date generate either myeloid or T-lymphoblasts, neither of which are representative of the human disease. Furthermore, we have observed recently that lineage-depleted (lin-) murine bone marrow cells infected with an E2A-PBX1 retrovirus selectively fail to repopulate the B-lymphoid compartment on transplantation into irradiated recipients. Therefore, we have now begun to investigate the mechanism by which enforced expression of E2A-PBX1 antagonizes B-lymphopoiesis.

We show that E2A-PBX1-transduced lin- fetal liver progenitor cells (FLPs) fail to differentiate to committed CD45R+ pro-B-cells when cultured with IL-7 in the presence of OP9 stromal cells. Instead these cells manifest a relatively immature immunophenotype (CD45R-, CD11b-, CD117+), are murine stem cell factor (SCF) dependent, and undergo myeloid differentiation upon stimulation with granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or transplantation into irradiated mice. Amino acid substitutions in E2A-PBX1 that impair co-activator recruitment or DNA binding completely rescue the differentiation block, implying a critical role for target-gene regulation by E2A-PBX1. E2A-PBX1-transduced cells fail to induce the B-lymphoid commitment genes Ebf1 and Pax5, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analysis shows aberrant persistence of the Polycomb silencing mark H3K27me3 at these promoters. Previous studies have identified the Polycomb gene Bmi1 as a candidate E2A-PBX1 target gene. However, enforced expression of Bmi1 neither blocked induction of Ebf1 or Pax5 nor impaired B-lymphopoiesis, indicating that Bmi1 is not sufficient to mediate blocked differentiation by E2A-PBX1. Gene expression microarray analysis identified cytokines (ex., Csf2, IL1a, Il6) and transcription factors (HoxA9, Tal1) up-regulated in E2A-PBX1-transduced FLPs that are known to antagonize B-lymphoid development.

In summary, our results support the notion that enforced expression of E2A-PBX1 in early hematopoietic progenitors blocks B-lymphopoiesis, to an important degree, by inducing the transcription of genes whose products antagonize early steps of B-lymphoid commitment, including induction of Ebf1 and Pax5. HoxA9 is particularly interesting as a mediator of E2A-PBX1 effects in view of its extreme induction ratio in our system (at least 1000-fold relative to controls), its propensity to promote myeloid over lymphoid differentiation, and its well-established role in leukemogenesis. Studies to investigate a potential requirement for HoxA9 and other candidates in mediating the E2A-PBX1-driven B-lymphoid differentiation block are ongoing.

Disclosures:

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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