Abstract
Abstract 2389
The transcription factor GATA3 plays an important role in normal T cell development. Its role in mature T cells is well understood, but its function in earlier stages of T cell development remains unclear. Whereas GATA3 levels are precisely regulated for the T cell differentiation program, aberrant expression of GATA3 has been linked to tumorigenesis. Based on these observations, we investigated the role of GATA3 in Early Thymic Progenitor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ETP-ALL), a newly defined high-risk subgroup of T-ALL, characterized by a specific gene expression profile and distinct immunophenotype.
Eighty-six bone marrow samples from adult patients with newly diagnosed T-ALL, including ETP-ALL (n=17) enrolled into the German Multicenter Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (GMALL) trials, were studied for GATA3 expression by oligonucleotide expression arrays (HG-U133 plus 2.0) within the Microarray Innovations in LEukemia study. We identified additional 71 ETP-ALL adult patients and 94 T-ALL patients enrolled on the GMALL protocol, in which GATA3 mRNA expression was measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Combining ETP-ALL and T-ALL cases (n=165), we defined two GATA3 expression groups GATA3null and GATA3high based on a biological gap (GATA3 expression of 0.2). DNA methylation was analyzed in both T-ALL (n=11) and ETP-ALL (n=69) samples by pyrosequencing with primers designed to include seven CpG sites of Exon 2/Intron 3 of GATA3. Samples were grouped into GATA3 high vs. low methylation according to their mean methylation being below or above 40%.
Based on gene expression arrays we observed a high proportion of ETP-ALL (11/17) that lacked GATA3 expression, whereas only a small fraction of the remaining T-ALL cases (3/69) had no GATA3 expression. These results were validated by RT-PCR in a larger cohort: 26% of ETP-ALL (19/71) were GATA3null, but only 2% of T-ALL (2/94) were in the GATA3null expression group. To explore the regulation of this specific expression pattern, epigenetic regulation of GATA3 was analyzed by pyrosequencing. While unselected T-ALL samples were hypomethylated (< 6% methylated CpG), ETP-ALL samples had a higher GATA3 methylation status (28% methylated CpG, p<0.001). ETP-ALL cases were further categorized into high methylated (18/69) and low methylated samples (51/69) and correlated to mRNA expression. GATA3null samples showed a higher degree of GATA3 methylation (41% methylated CpGs) compared to GATA3high samples (8% methylated CpGs, p < 0.001). In an in-vitro assay of T-cell leukemia cell lines demethylating agents increased GATA3 mRNA expression by up to 5-fold. In murine hematopoetic stem cells it was shown that loss of DNMT3A induced GATA3 expression via hypomethylation. In ETP-ALL, we identified 11 DNMT3A mutations in 69 samples (16%) and correlated the DNMT3A mutation status to GATA3 methylation. Ten of 11 (91%) DNMT3A mutated samples showed low level GATA3 methylation, whereas 17 (29%) of the 58 DNMT3A wildtype cases had high methylation.
ETP-ALL is a subgroup of adult T-ALL with a distinct molecular profile. Here we show that within ETP-ALL a separate molecular entity can be defined by GATA3 silencing due to DNA methylation. In-vitro studies showed that GATA3 expression can be restored by the use of demethylating agents. As loss of function mutations in DNMT3A correlate with low GATA3 methylation in ETP-ALL, a potential role of DNMT3A in the epigenetic silencing of GATA3 is suspected. So far, the number of targeted drugs available for T-ALL is limited. Therefore, incorporating demethylating agents may resolve the T-cell differentiation block in T-ALL by increasing GATA3 expression. Future work will explore downstream effects of GATA3 in acute leukemia.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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