Key Points
Overexpression of RUNX1 and its target NF-E2 is not specific for PV but is also seen in polycythemias due to augmented hypoxia sensing.
Elevated levels of RUNX1 and NF-E2 are not specific for primary polycythemias, as these are not present in PFCP.
Abstract
Overexpression of transcription factors runt-related transcription factor 1 (RUNX1) and nuclear factor, erythroid-derived 2 (NF-E2) was reported in granulocytes of patients with polycythemia vera and other myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs). Further, a transgenic mouse overexpressing the NF-E2 transgene was reported to be a model of MPN. We hypothesized that increased transcripts of RUNX1 and NF-E2 might characterize other polycythemic states with primary polycythemic features, that is, those with exaggerated erythropoiesis due to augmented erythropoietin (EPO) sensitivity. We tested the expression of RUNX1 and NF-E2 in polycythemic patients of diverse phenotypes and molecular causes. We report that RUNX1 and NF-E2 overexpression is not specific for MPN; these transcripts were also significantly elevated in polycythemias with augmented hypoxia-inducible factor activity whose erythroid progenitors were hypersensitive to EPO. RUNX1 and NF-E2 overexpression was not detected in patients with EPO receptor (EPOR) gain-of-function, suggesting distinct mechanisms by which erythroid progenitors in polycythemias with defects of hypoxia sensing and EPOR mutations exert their EPO hypersensitivity.
Introduction
Transcription factor runt-related transcription factor 1 (RUNX1, also known as AML1) is the principal regulator of mammalian hematopoiesis. Aberrant RUNX1 expression in the hematopoietic lineage, generated by multiple mechanisms (translocations, gain-of-function mutations, and gene amplification), is thought to be causative of leukemic transformation.1 However, mutations of RUNX1 are rare in chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs).2
Transcription factor nuclear factor, erythroid-derived 2 (NF-E2) is a target of RUNX1 that is essential for the regulation of erythroid and megakaryocytic maturation and differentiation and expression of globin genes.3
It has been reported that increased RUNX1 expression in granulocytes is present in all 3 classical MPNs, that is, polycythemia vera (PV), essential thrombocythemia, and primary myelofibrosis. It has been suggested to be specific for MPN,4 and that elevated NF-E2 promotes erythropoietin (EPO)-independent erythroid maturation of PV hematopoietic stem cells in vitro.5,6 A mouse model overexpressing the NF-E2 transgene in hematopoietic cells was reported to be a new model of MPN.7
Polycythemic states can be divided into primary polycythemias, characterized by intrinsically hyperproliferative erythroid progenitors that are hypersensitive to EPO, and secondary polycythemias, wherein erythroid progenitors respond normally to EPO but circulating EPO is elevated or inappropriately normal for the level of increased red cell mass.8,9 Examples of primary polycythemias are PV, gain-of-function mutations of the EPO receptor causing a phenotype of primary familial and congenital polycythemia (PFCP), and some congenital disorders of hypoxia sensing that may share features of both primary and secondary polycythemias, as exemplified by Chuvash polycythemia.10 In this report, we examined the possibility that increased transcripts of RUNX1 and NF-E2 may also be present in other primary polycythemic states.
Study design
Sample processing
We prospectively recruited 26 subjects with various primary and secondary polycythemias (Table 1) using approved University of Utah (23 subjects) and Palacky University Hospital (3 subjects) Institutional Review Board informed consent in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Patients’ granulocytes and mononuclear cells were separated from peripheral blood, as previously described.11 Mouse embryos and yolk sacs were analyzed as described.12
. | Diagnosis . | Gene mutations . | Number of patients . | Sensitivity of erythroid colonies to EPO . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary polycythemias | PV | JAK2V617F mutation | n = 6 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent |
PFCP | EPORQ434X mutation* | n = 2 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent | |
EPOR5967insT mutation† | n = 2 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent | ||
Polycythemias with features of primary and secondary polycythemia | Congenital polycythemias due to VHL mutations | VHLR200W mutation10 (Chuvash polycythemia) | n = 2 | Hypersensitive |
VHLP138L mutation16 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | ||
VHLT124A/L188V mutation17 | n = 2 | Hypersensitive | ||
Congenital polycythemias due to HIF2A mutation | HIF2AM353V mutation18 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | |
HIF2AG537R mutation18 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | ||
Congenital polycythemia | LNKI257T mutation‡ | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | |
Secondary polycythemias | Congenital polycythemia due to VHL mutation | VHLH191D mutation19 (Croatian type) | n = 2 | Normal |
Secondary polycythemia due to hypoxia | Low pO2 | n = 6 | Normal |
. | Diagnosis . | Gene mutations . | Number of patients . | Sensitivity of erythroid colonies to EPO . |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary polycythemias | PV | JAK2V617F mutation | n = 6 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent |
PFCP | EPORQ434X mutation* | n = 2 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent | |
EPOR5967insT mutation† | n = 2 | Hypersensitive and EPO independent | ||
Polycythemias with features of primary and secondary polycythemia | Congenital polycythemias due to VHL mutations | VHLR200W mutation10 (Chuvash polycythemia) | n = 2 | Hypersensitive |
VHLP138L mutation16 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | ||
VHLT124A/L188V mutation17 | n = 2 | Hypersensitive | ||
Congenital polycythemias due to HIF2A mutation | HIF2AM353V mutation18 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | |
HIF2AG537R mutation18 | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | ||
Congenital polycythemia | LNKI257T mutation‡ | n = 1 | Hypersensitive | |
Secondary polycythemias | Congenital polycythemia due to VHL mutation | VHLH191D mutation19 (Croatian type) | n = 2 | Normal |
Secondary polycythemia due to hypoxia | Low pO2 | n = 6 | Normal |
Two previously unreported subjects of European descent with PFCP due to the EPOR gain-of-function EPORQ434X mutation; this mutation was previously reported in a Japanese family.14
Two Czech patients whose phenotype was previously described.15
A patient with no detectable EPOR, JAK2V617F, or JAK2 exon 12 mutations and low level of EPO (<1 mU/mL) who was heterozygous for a single-nucleotide polymorphism in exon 3 (rs147341899) in the LNK gene.
In vitro sensitivity assay of erythroid progenitors to EPO
Mononuclear cells were isolated from peripheral blood and subjected to in vitro colony-forming assay, as previously described.13 Erythroid burst-forming unit colonies (BFU-Es) were scored by standard morphologic criteria.
Real-time polymerase chain reaction assay
Total RNA was isolated using TRI-reagent (Molecular Research Center, Cincinnati, OH) and treated with DNA-free DNase Treatment and Removal Reagents (Ambion, Life Technologies, NY). DNA-free RNA was reverse-transcribed using a SuperScript VILO cDNA Synthesis Kit (Invitrogen/ Life Technologies, NY) according to the manufacturer’s instructions and used for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction as described.16
Results and discussion
The phenotypes and causative mutations of 26 polycythemic patients are depicted in Table 1. All primary polycythemic patients had erythroid progenitor hypersensitivity to or independent of EPO (Figure 1A); all secondary polycythemic subjects had normal BFU-E EPO sensitivity (data not shown). To assess whether the putative mechanism underlying the intrinsic hypersensitivity of erythroid progenitors to EPO in PV5,6 is unique to PV or shared with other polycythemia states, we analyzed RUNX1 and NF-E2 expression in hypersensitive BFU-Es.
Elevated RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts in hypersensitive BFU-Es and granulocytes from patients with PV and polycythemias with defects of hypoxia sensing
All examined PV patients, polycythemia patients with defects of hypoxia sensing (2 unrelated subjects with Chuvash polycythemia, 1 polycythemic patient homozygous for the VHLP138L mutation,16 and 1 patient with the HIF2AM535V gain-of-function mutation18 ), and 1 patient with a heterozygous single-nucleotide polymorphism in the LNK gene (rs147341899; LNKI257T) had elevated RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts in their BFU-Es (Figure 1A). RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts were also increased in granulocytes of these patients and in granulocytes of another gain-of-function HIF2A mutant (HIF2AG537R) patient18 from whom RNA from BFU-Es was unavailable (Figure 1B).
Patients with PFCP do not have elevated RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts
We tested whether increased RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts characterize all primary polycythemias. PFCP-derived BFU-Es and/or granulocytes did not have increased levels of these transcripts in cells with the EPORQ434X mutation14 nor in BFU-Es from PFCP patients with EPOR5967insT mutation15 (granulocytes were unavailable) (Figure 1A-B).
Some disorders of hypoxia sensing have elevated RUNX1 but not NF-E2 gene transcripts
We next examined granulocytes from 2 Croatian polycythemic patients with a homozygous VHLH191D exon 3 gene mutation whose erythroid progenitors were not hypersensitive to EPO19 and found RUNX1 transcripts, but not NF-E2 transcripts, increased (Figure 1B). We observed similar results in 2 compound heterozygotes for VHLT124A and VHLL188V mutations. These 2 polycythemic siblings had hypersensitive erythroid colonies17 and increased RUNX1, but not NF-E2, transcripts in granulocytes (Figure 1B). RNA from their BFU-Es was unavailable for testing.
Secondary polycythemia had normal RUNX1 and NF-E2 transcripts
All 6 unrelated subjects with secondary polycythemia had normal RUNX1 and NF-E2 gene transcripts in granulocytes (Figure 1B).
Patients with increased RUNX1 gene transcripts have increased transcripts of HIF targets
We then examined granulocyte transcripts of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-regulated genes TFRC, SLC2A1, HK1, PDK1, VEGF, and BNIP3 and found them to be increased in all PV patients and all studied polycythemic patients with increased RUNX1 gene transcripts, but not in polycythemic EPORQ434X patients or 6 patients with secondary polycythemia (Figure 1B). EPOR5967insT granulocytes were unavailable.
Regulation of Runx1 transcript in Hif1α−/− mouse embryo and yolk sac
To further support our hypothesis that HIF signaling regulates RUNX1 expression, we analyzed Hif1α−/− whole mouse embryo (Hif1α deficiency is embryonic lethal by day 11) and hematopoietic tissue, ie, murine Hif1α−/− yolk sac (E9.5).12 The Runx1 transcript was down-regulated (Figure 1Bx), confirming that HIF directly or indirectly regulates RUNX1.
In summary, we found increased expression of RUNX1 in all patients with augmented HIF signaling, including PV patients. Further, in some, but not all, patients with augmented HIF signaling, we also detected elevated NF-E2 transcripts. Hypersensitive erythroid progenitors derived from patients with PV and augmented HIF signaling, but not PFCP, share elevated expression of RUNX1 and NF-E2. This suggests that HIF-mediated mechanisms, by which erythroid progenitors in PV and polycythemias with augmented hypoxia sensing, may exert their EPO hypersensitivity by up-regulation of RUNX1 and NF-E2. However, this is not a mechanism of erythroid EPO hypersensitivity in PFCP. The augmented HIF signaling in PV has not been well described; however, in our preliminary report, we observed increased HIF activity, the so-called “Warburg effect,” in PV patients.21 We conclude that increased expression of RUNX1 and NF-E2 is not specific for PV and other MPNs and is not universal for all primary polycythemic disorders such as PFCP, but it is present in those primary polycythemias with augmented HIF signaling.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by grant 1P01CA108671-O1A2 (National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD) awarded to the Myeloproliferative Disorders Consortium (Principal Investigator, Ron Hoffman) Project 1, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (Principal Investigator, J.T. Prchal), Education for Competitiveness Operational Programme projects CZ.1.07/2.3.00/20.0164 (K.K.) and CZ.1.07/2.3.00/30.0041 (L.L.), Czech Science Foundation Project P305/11/1745 (Principal Investigator, V. Divoky), and Palacky University (LF_2013_010).
Authorship
Contribution: K.K. performed the research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper; L.L. performed some research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper; F.L. performed some research and reviewed the paper; J.S. prepared and purified RNA from Hif1α−/− mice; M.H. contributed to the research and reviewed the paper; V.D. wrote the paper and provided financial support; and J.T.P. conceived the study, wrote the paper, and provided financial support.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Josef T. Prchal, Division of Hematology, 30 N 1900 E, 5C402 SOM, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84132; e-mail: josef.prchal@hsc.utah.edu.
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