Key Points
SFPQ-ABL1 is localized to the nuclear compartment and is a relatively weaker driver of cellular proliferation compared with BCR-ABL1.
SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 activate distinct signaling networks, both of which converge on inhibiting apoptosis and driving proliferation.
Abstract
Philadelphia-like (Ph-like) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a high-risk subtype of B-cell ALL characterized by a gene expression profile resembling Philadelphia chromosome–positive ALL (Ph+ ALL) in the absence of BCR-ABL1. Tyrosine kinase–activating fusions, some involving ABL1, are recurrent drivers of Ph-like ALL and are targetable with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). We identified a rare instance of SFPQ-ABL1 in a child with Ph-like ALL. SFPQ-ABL1 expressed in cytokine-dependent cell lines was sufficient to transform cells and these cells were sensitive to ABL1-targeting TKIs. In contrast to BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1 localized to the nuclear compartment and was a weaker driver of cellular proliferation. Phosphoproteomics analysis showed upregulation of cell cycle, DNA replication, and spliceosome pathways, and downregulation of signal transduction pathways, including ErbB, NF-κB, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and MAPK signaling in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells compared with BCR-ABL1–expressing cells. SFPQ-ABL1 expression did not activate phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B (PI3K/AKT) signaling and was associated with phosphorylation of G2/M cell cycle proteins. SFPQ-ABL1 was sensitive to navitoclax and S-63845 and promotes cell survival by maintaining expression of Mcl-1 and Bcl-xL. SFPQ-ABL1 has functionally distinct mechanisms by which it drives ALL, including subcellular localization, proliferative capacity, and activation of cellular pathways. These findings highlight the role that fusion partners have in mediating the function of ABL1 fusions.
Introduction
Philadelphia-like (Ph-like) ALL is a high-risk subtype of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) associated with increased rates of relapse and poor clinical outcomes.1 Ph-like ALL is characterized by a gene expression signature akin to that of Philadelphia chromosome–positive (Ph+) ALL in the absence of the BCR-ABL1 fusion gene.2,3 Instead, Ph-like ALL cases commonly harbor other cytokine receptor and tyrosine kinase–activating lesions.1 The clinical success of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in Ph+ ALL emphasize the importance of early identification of these potentially targetable lesions.4-6 Patients with Ph-like ALL harboring ABL-class rearrangements (ABL1, ABL2, CSF1R, or PDGFRB) exhibited improved outcomes when treated with TKIs at diagnosis or relapse.7 However, some ABL1 fusion proteins may be less sensitive to ABL1 inhibitors. For example, SNX2-ABL1 shows reduced sensitivity in vitro to multiple TKIs targeting ABL18 and is associated with poor clinical response to dasatinib.9,10 Understanding the sensitivity of specific molecular aberrations in Ph-like ALL can inform the selection of the most appropriate treatments.
To date, 12 ABL1 partner genes have been described in B-ALL: BCR, CENPC, ETV6, FOXP1, LSM14A, NUP153, NUP214, RANBP2, RCSD1, SFPQ, SNX2, and ZM1Z1.1,9,11-13 Notably, 4 of these fusion genes, FOXP1-ABL1, RCSD1-ABL1, SNX2-ABL1, and SFPQ-ABL1, have a different ABL1 breakpoint compared with BCR-ABL1.9,14-16 These fusion partners link to exon 4 of ABL1, resulting in chimeric proteins lacking the SRC Homology 3 (SH3) and part of the SRC Homology 2 (SH2) domain, normally retained in BCR-ABL1. The SH2 and SH3 domains regulate ABL1 kinase activation.17 How the absence of these domains influences transforming capacity has not been specifically studied for rare ABL1 fusions.18 Evidence from the study of BCR-ABL1 oncoproteins19-21 and NUP214-ABL122,23 suggests that in addition to providing oligomerization domains, the N-terminal fusion partner also mediates intermolecular interactions and determines the subcellular localization of the fusion.
This study reports an SFPQ-ABL1 fusion identified in an 8-year-old patient with B-ALL.24 SFPQ-ABL1 is extremely rare, previously reported in 7 cases, with our case representing the youngest patient to date.12,16,24-27 SFPQ is 1 of 3 proteins belonging to the Drosophila-Behavior, Human-Splicing (DBHS) family, also including NONO and PSPC1, which in part function in the formation of nuclear paraspeckles, RNA-protein bodies that mediate nuclear retention of messenger RNAs (mRNAs).28-30 SFPQ is a multifunctional nuclear protein implicated in a range of additional cellular processes, including mRNA splicing, transcriptional regulation, translation, and 3′-end processing.29,31-34 It is unknown whether SFPQ exerts its wild-type functions when fused to ABL1 or if SFPQ-ABL1 expression alters wild-type SFPQ function.
Here we identify unique molecular features that distinguish SFPQ-ABL1 from BCR-ABL1. As with BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1 promotes cell survival and was sensitive to TKIs that targeted ABL1. Unlike BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1 was localized to the nuclear compartment, activated distinct signaling networks, and was a comparatively weak driver of cellular proliferation. This study highlights the functional importance of the N-terminal partners in ABL1 fusion proteins and the unique mechanisms by which they function.
Methods
Ethics statement
This study was approved by the Royal Children’s Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC 34127). Patients/families provided informed written consent for samples to be banked and subsequently used for research purposes, including the sequencing studies we have used to identify this fusion. Ethics approval did not require a second consenting procedure.
Case description and SFPQ-ABL1 identification
The patient presented as an 8-year-old female with a peripheral blood white cell count of 43.5 × 109 cells/L and the presence of central nervous system (CNS-3) disease. Conventional karyotype analysis was performed as part of the patient’s standard-of-care diagnostic testing (Victorian Clinical Genetics Services, Parkville, VIC, Australia). The abnormal karyotype identified a t(1;9)(p34;q34) chromosomal translocation, predicted to result in the SFPQ-ABL1 gene fusion.16 The presence of this rearrangement was also indicated by an abnormal interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization result using the standard BCR/ABL1 Dual Color probe, showing diminished ABL1 signal and gene splitting suggesting a t(1;9) translocation. The patient was treated on Children’s Oncology Group AALL1131 induction protocol followed by Children’s Oncology Group AALL1122, standard chemotherapy with dasatinib, and remained in remission at last follow-up, 4.5 years’ post-diagnosis. The SFPQ-ABL1 fusion transcript and specific breakpoint were retrospectively identified as part of a previously published ALL cohort,24 using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq). RNA-seq and fusion detection were performed as previously described. The SFPQ-ABL1 breakpoint and full-length fusion were polymerase chain reaction amplified from patient complementary DNA using previously published16 and custom primers, respectively, and sequences were confirmed by Sanger sequencing (Australian Genome Research Facility, Melbourne, VIC, Australia). Visualization of fusion transcripts was produced by using Arriba,35 and protein schematics were produced by using ProteinPaint.36
Functional studies
Detailed information on DNA constructs, cell culture, western blotting, viability and proliferation assays, drug treatment assays, and data analysis is provided in the supplemental Methods.
Immunofluorescence
Ba/F3 and primary pre–B cells expressing BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1, or murine stem cell virus (MSCV, empty vector control) were seeded in Nunc Laboratory-TekII chambers, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with methanol (Perm Buffer III; BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ), and incubated overnight at 4°C with an anti-Abl antibody (Cell Signaling Technology, Danvers, MA). Anti-rabbit IgG AF-647 was used as a secondary antibody (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). Cells were mounted with Prolong Gold anti-fade mounting media with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Slides were viewed by using a Zeiss Elyra 780 confocal microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) and images analyzed with ZEN (black edition; Zeiss).
Phosphoproteomics sample preparation
Label-free quantification was performed on 4 biologically independent lines of MSCV, BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1, and SFPQ-ABL1 + SH2/SH3 Ba/F3. MSCV Ba/F3 cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 (Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and 0.5 ng/mL murine interleukin-3 (IL-3) (PeproTech, Cranbury, NJ), and all other cell lines were maintained in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. Cell pellets were prepared for mass spectrometry. Complete details regarding sample preparation and mass spectrometry are provided in the supplemental Methods.
Raw mass spectrometer files were analyzed by using MaxQuant (version 1.5.8.3). The database search was performed by using the UniProt Mus musculus database (date of download, March 2018) plus common contaminants with strict trypsin specificity allowing up to 3 missed cleavages. Missing peptide expressions were imputed by using a method based on low-rank decomposition. The imputed data were corrected for technical variabilities inherent to proteomics experiments via Surrogate Variable Analysis implemented in R/Bioconductor package limma.37 Tests for differential peptide expression (DPE) and differential peptide usage (DPU) were performed by using linear models with empirical Bayes moderated t-statistics using limma. The primary comparison performed in these analyses was SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells vs BCR-ABL1–expressing cells; MSCV- and SFPQ-ABL1+SH2/SH3 mutant–expressing Ba/F3 cells were used as additional controls.
For peptides of interest, modified peptide sequences were aligned to Mus musculus protein sequences using the “search sequence” function of PhosphoSitePlus version 6.5.9.38 Evidence of phosphorylation regulation annotated in PhosphoSitePlus was recorded for individual phosphorylation events.
Precursor ion intensities were quantified by MaxQuant in data-dependent acquisition mode. Fragment ion intensities in each sample were summarized at the modified peptide level by taking the median of values in that sample. Peptides with <4 observed values were discarded. Peptide intensities were log2-transformed and quantile normalized. Missing peptide intensities were imputed by fitting a rank 2 approximation model to the log-intensity data using msImpute.39 Unwanted variations were estimated from imputed data using the wsva() function in limma,37 and up to 5 surrogate variables were removed (regressed out) from the data. A linear model was fitted to each modified peptide, and statistical significance for differential changes in fold-change (differential expression) between SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 was determined by empirical Bayes moderated t-statistic and 5% false discovery rate using limma.40 For gene set enrichment analysis, peptide-level P values were converted to protein-level P values using Sime’s test. The log fold change of each protein was determined as the log fold change of the peptide with the most significant P value. Enriched KEGG pathways were determined using protein-level statistics and kegga() function in limma. The differentially used peptides (peptides differentially phosphorylated relative to other peptides of the same protein) were identified by using diffSplice() and the t-test mode of topSplice() functions in limma.
Data-sharing statement
The mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE41 partner repository with the data set identifier PXD028925. Ba/F3 RNA-seq data are available the Gene Expression Omnibus database (accession number GSE185860). Patient RNA-seq data are available from the European Genome-Phenome Archive (accession number EGAS00001004212).
Results
SFPQ-ABL1 transforms cytokine-dependent cell lines but is a relatively weaker driver of proliferation compared with BCR-ABL1
We previously sequenced RNA from a cohort of pediatric patients with ALL as part of an RNA-seq utility study.24 Analysis of RNA-seq data from 1 patient confirmed the presence of an SFPQ-ABL1 fusion transcript, fusing exon 9 of SFPQ to exon 4 of ABL1 (Figure 1A). This transcript lacks the SH3 domain and part of the SH2 domain, usually present in BCR-ABL1 (Figure 1B). Given that the SH2 domain is known to facilitate interaction between BCR-ABL1 and signal transduction proteins, the absence of this domain in SFPQ-ABL1 may contribute to differences in transformation and signaling. To confirm the transforming capacity of SFPQ-ABL1 and further explore functional and signaling differences compared with BCR-ABL1, the SFPQ-ABL1 fusion transcript was amplified from patient complementary DNA and expressed in Ba/F3 cells (Figure 1C; supplemental Figure 1).
The SFPQ-ABL1 fusion protein had a constitutively active ABL1 kinase domain, indicated by phosphorylation of a known ABL142 and BCR-ABL143 substrate, CrkL (Figure 1D). We showed that despite higher expression of the SFPQ-ABL1 fusion than the BCR-ABL1 fusion in Ba/F3 cells, BCR-ABL1 expression drives increased kinase activity, indicated by relatively increased levels of Phospho-CrkL (P-CrkL, Figure 1E; supplemental Figure 2). SFPQ-ABL1 expression effectively blocked IL-3 withdrawal–induced cell death (Figure 1F) but was a weaker driver of IL-3–independent proliferation compared with BCR-ABL1 (Figure 1G; supplemental Figure 3). Importantly, Ba/F3 cells transformed by SFPQ-ABL1 were sensitive to TKIs that target ABL1 but not the JAK inhibitor ruxolitinib (Figure 1H).
In addition to Ba/F3 cells, we expressed SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 in IL-7–dependent Pu.1/Irf4 double knockout (DKO) pre–B cell lines (Figure 2A). This model mimics Ikzf1 (encoding Ikaros) deletion, frequently observed in Ph+ and Ph-like ALL, as Ikzf1 is a direct transcriptional target of Irf4 and Pu.1.2,44,45 In this model, BCR-ABL1 expression completely blocked IL-7 withdrawal–induced cell death (Figure 2B). Transformation by SFPQ-ABL1 was delayed, compared with BCR-ABL1 (supplemental Figure 4). To confirm this phenotype, we transduced IL-7–dependent wild-type pre–B cells, derived from wild-type C57BL/6 mice, with BCR-ABL1 and SFPQ-ABL1 and monitored cells by flow cytometry after IL-7 withdrawal. Here, we again observed delayed transformation by SFPQ-ABL1, compared with BCR-ABL1 (supplemental Figure 5). Lastly, we showed that SFPQ-ABL1–expressing Pu.1/Irf4 DKO cells were sensitive to TKIs that target ABL1 (Figure 2C; supplemental Figure 6). Together, these data confirm that the SFPQ-ABL1 fusion is transforming and sensitive to ABL1-targeting TKIs but is a relatively weaker driver of cytokine-independent proliferation compared with BCR-ABL1.
SFPQ-ABL1 localizes to the nucleus
Given that wild-type SFPQ localizes to nuclear paraspeckles and the nucleosome, we speculated that SFPQ-ABL1, which retains one nuclear localization signal of SFPQ, may be localized to the nuclear compartment.46 To test this theory, SFPQ-ABL1, BCR-ABL1 and MSCV (control) were first overexpressed in HEK293T cells, and the localization of the ABL1 fusions was assessed by immunofluorescence. In this model, SFPQ-ABL1 was exclusively localized to the nucleus, unlike BCR-ABL1, which was predominantly localized to the cytoplasm (supplemental Figure 7). To confirm these findings in the context of B cells, we next analyzed Ba/F3 and wild-type pre–B cells transformed with BCR-ABL1 or SFPQ-ABL1. These experiments confirmed that although BCR-ABL1 was localized in the cytoplasm in aggregates (Ba/F3) (Figure 3A) or diffusely (wild-type pre–B cells) (Figure 3B), SFPQ-ABL1 was primarily localized to the nucleus.
The ABL1 breakpoints do not account for phenotypic differences between SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1
To determine whether the SH2/SH3 domains contribute to functional differences between the ABL1 fusions, we generated an SFPQ-ABL1 construct incorporating the SH2/SH3 domain (SFPQ-ABL1 + SH2/SH3), and BCR-ABL1 without these domains (BCR-ABL1 – SH2/SH3) (supplemental Figure 8). Interestingly, addition or deletion of the SH2/SH3 domains had no effect on the capacity of these fusion proteins to block IL-3 withdrawal–induced cell death in Ba/F3 cells (Figure 4A). Furthermore, inclusion of the SH2/SH3 domain in the SFPQ-ABL1 fusion protein did not increase the proliferative capacity to that of BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 4B).
To interrogate in an unbiased manner how the phosphoprotein networks of SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 may be altered by the presence or absence of the SH2/SH3 domains, we performed label-free quantification of phosphopeptides using mass spectrometry. We quantified a total of 24 532 phosphopeptides with a serine(S):threonine(T):tyrosine(Y) phosphosite ratio of 41.8:8.6:1. Although SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 expression was strikingly associated with distinct phosphoproteomic profiles, the addition of the SH2/SH3 encoding domains to SFPQ-ABL1 did not drastically alter the phosphoproteome (Figure 4C; supplemental Figure 9). Together, these results suggest that the signaling and phenotypic differences observed between SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 cannot be primarily attributed to the different ABL1 breakpoints.
SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 activate distinct signaling networks
We performed 2 complementary approaches to identify sites that were differentially phosphorylated between SFPQ-ABL1– and BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (supplemental Figure 10). DPE analysis identifies peptides that are differentially phosphorylated independent of all other peptides, whereas DPU analysis identifies peptides that are differentially phosphorylated within a protein. DPE identified 2201 peptides, including 61 tyrosine (pY) sites, that were differentially phosphorylated in SFPQ-ABL1– and BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (supplemental Tables 1-2). Of the top differentially phosphorylated sites between BCR-ABL1– and SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells (by adjusted P value), increased phosphorylation of proteins involved in signal transduction and known BCR-ABL1 adaptor proteins, including BCR-ABL1 Y177 interactors GAB2 and DOK1,21,47 was observed in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 4D). In SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells, higher levels of phosphorylation in transcription factors and DNA/RNA binding proteins were observed. Notably higher phosphorylation levels of MLX, TPX2, SCMH1, PTBP1 (also known as hnRNP I), and DEPTOR (a negative regulator of mammalian target of rapamycin [mTOR]) was observed in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing and SFPQ-ABL + SH2/SH3–expressing cells, suggesting that these proteins may be regulated by the SFPQ region of the fusion. Interestingly, reduced SHIP1 phosphorylation (encoded by Inpp5d) was exclusively observed in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells, compared with all other groups, consistent with previously published results.48
Pathway enrichment analysis was conducted on sites differentially phosphorylated between cells harboring SFPQ-ABL1 or BCR-ABL1 (Figure 4E). In total, 43 KEGG pathways showed evidence for differential regulation between the 2 fusions, the majority of which indicated increased signaling activity in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells. Specifically, NF-κB, MAPK, vascular endothelial growth factor, ErbB, and Ras signaling pathways, as well as the chronic myeloid leukemia pathway (specific for BCR-ABL1), were enriched in proteins with increased phosphorylation levels in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 4E; supplemental Table 3). Enrichment for 7 KEGG pathways, including DNA replication, cell cycle, and spliceosome, were identified in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells. Enrichment of predominately nuclear pathways in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells is consistent with the localization of the fusion.
To assess the potential functional impact of increased phosphorylation of spliceosome proteins in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells, a comprehensive analysis of RNA-seq data was performed to identify differential gene splicing between SFPQ-ABL1– and BCR-ABL1–expressing Ba/F3 cells. Across all 3 methodologies used (as discussed in the Methods), we identified evidence of differential splicing in only 43 genes, including Abl1, Bcr, and Sfpq, suggesting there is little difference in splicing overall (supplemental Table 4). Of note, reduced expression of known SFPQ transcriptional targets32 was observed in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells, suggesting that the enforced SFPQ-ABL1 expression may antagonize wild-type SFPQ function (supplemental Figure 11).
SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 differentially phosphorylate cell cycle proteins
The cell cycle pathway was the most upregulated pathway (P = .0158) in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 4E). In total, phosphoproteomics identified 78 proteins involved in the KEGG cell cycle pathway (supplemental Table 5), 5 with increased phosphorylation in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells and 29 in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 4F-G). Analysis of specific phosphorylated sites in cell cycle proteins distinguished 39 that were differentially phosphorylated between BCR-ABL1– and SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells (supplemental Tables 6-7). We observed increased phosphorylation levels of proteins involved in G1/S phase regulation, including cyclin D2 (CCND2), Rb, and p21CIP1(encoded by Cdkn1a) in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells, and proteins involved in G2/M phase regulation and DNA damage response in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells. Of particular interest in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells was increased phosphorylation of PLK1 pT210, a known activation residue,49 and WEE1 pS139, predicted to mediate degradation of the protein and which could render cells sensitive to drugs targeting other checkpoint kinases.50 To assess this, we treated Ba/F3 cells expressing either BCR-ABL1 or SFPQ-ABL1 with PLK1 inhibitors: BI2536 and BI6727 (volasertib), prexasertib (checkpoint kinase 1 [CHEK1] inhibitor), talazoparib (poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase [PARP] inhibitor), and berzosertib (ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related [ATX1] inhibitor). Interestingly, both ABL1 fusion–expressing lines tended to be more sensitive to the PARP inhibitor talazoparib, compared with the empty vector control, suggesting that ABL1 fusions may dysregulate DNA damage repair pathways.51 However, there was no difference in response between cells expressing SFPQ-ABL1 or BCR-ABL1 to any of the inhibitors tested (supplemental Figure 12). These results suggest that although SFPQ-ABL1 differentially activates cell cycle and DNA damage response proteins compared with BCR-ABL1, this action does not result in differential sensitivity to drugs that target these pathways.
SPFQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 differentially phosphorylate SHIP1 and GAB2
DPU analysis was used to identify specific phosphorylation sites regulated by SPFQ-ABL1 or BCR-ABL1 (Figure 5A; supplemental Table 8). In DPU analysis, a peptide is first compared between cell lines, in this case BCR-ABL1– and SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells, and then ranked against all other peptides in the same protein to identify sites that are differentially phosphorylated within a protein. We focused on the 35 tyrosine sites that were differentially phosphorylated between SFPQ-ABL1– and BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (supplemental Table 9). Of these sites, 19 had a biological effect annotated in PhosphoSitePlus (supplemental Table 10). In general, increased phosphorylation of adaptor proteins involved in signal transduction pathways in BCR-ABL1–expressing and increased phosphorylation of transcription factors and spliceosome proteins in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells were observed. All 16 tyrosine sites enriched in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells have been previously identified in the phosphoproteome of p190 BCR-ABL1,19,20 including GAB2 pY263 and pY632, which regulate interactions with CrkL (pY263) and SHP-2 (pY632), affecting cell growth and differentiation52 (Figure 5B). Interestingly, GAB2 pS469 and pS612, which function in a negative feedback loop regulating phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B (PI3K/AKT) signaling,53 were more highly phosphorylated in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells.
Increased SHIP1 pY918 was observed in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells. Consistent with previous studies,48 SHIP1 downregulation and increased AKT phosphorylation were observed in BCR-ABL1–expressing Ba/F3 cells. In contrast, Ba/F3 cells expressing SFPQ-ABL1 maintain SHIP1 expression and AKT phosphorylation at levels similar to control cells (Figure 5C). Imatinib treatment of BCR-ABL1–expressing Ba/F3 cells, and to a lesser extent SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells, increased the abundance of SHIP1 and reduced AKT phosphorylation (Figure 5D). In Pu.1/Irf4 DKO cells, we observed a similar pattern of SHIP1 expression in each of our 3 cell lines, although there was no difference in levels of Phospho-AKT (P-AKT) between these cell lines (Figure 5E). These data suggest that SFPQ-ABL1 may not activate AKT signaling to the same extent as BCR-ABL1.
Increased STAT5A pY694 and STAT5B pY699 were identified in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells in the phosphoproteomics analysis (supplemental Figure 13). However, in contrast to P-AKT, we did not detect a clear difference in the abundance of STAT5 phosphorylation (Y694) between SFPQ-ABL1– and BCR-ABL1–expressing cells, nor did we observe a difference in P-STAT5 expression after ruxolitinib treatment using western blotting (supplemental Figure 12B). Furthermore, we identified no specific STAT transcriptional activity associated with SFPQ-ABL1 expression (supplemental Figure 13C). STAT5 activation is required for ABL1-fusion transformation, and these data suggest that as with BCR-ABL1, SFPQ-ABL1 promotes STAT5 phosphorylation, independent of JAK1/2.
SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells are sensitive to BH3 mimetics
Both SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 block cytokine-withdrawal–induced cell death to drive transformation (Figures 1 and 2). To explore how SFPQ-ABL1 promotes cell survival, we first treated Pu.1/Irf4 DKO cells expressing SFPQ-ABL1 or BCR-ABL1 with BH3 mimetics with inhibitory activity against different pro-survival proteins: ABT-263 (navitoclax), ABT-199 (venetoclax), and S-63845. All cell lines (including controls) were relatively resistant to ABT-199. Interestingly, cells expressing SFPQ-ABL1 were more sensitive to ABT-263 (P = .0023) and S-63845, although not statistically significant, compared with BCR-ABL1–expressing cells (Figure 6A). We next harvested protein from imatinib-treated Ba/F3 and Pu.1/Irf4 DKO cells to analyze expression of pro-survival proteins. In Pu.1/Irf4 DKO cells, treated with 10 µM imatinib for 16, 24, and 48 hours, we observed a clear reduction in Mcl-1 and Bcl-2 expression over time in both fusion-expressing cell lines (Figure 6B). Bcl-xL was maintained in BCR-ABL1–expressing cells and to a lesser extent in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells when treated with imatinib. This relatively increased dependency on Bcl-xL for survival may explain the increased sensitivity of SFPQ-ABL1 to ABT-263. In Ba/F3 cells treated for 6 hours with imatinib, a dose-dependent reduction of Mcl-1 was observed, whereas Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL expression was maintained (Figure 6C). Lastly, we treated cells with a dose range of navitoclax and S-63845 as single agents or in combination with imatinib and showed that this combination had an additive effect on cell killing (Figure 6D; supplemental Figure 14).
Discussion
The current study presents the first functional analysis of the SFPQ-ABL1 fusion protein. Ph-like ALL patients harboring ABL1 and JAK2 rearrangements are predicted to respond to TKI therapy; however, these responses may be variable.8-10 Functional characterization of rare ABL1 fusions provides important validating evidence for TKI therapy. Of the 3 reported SFPQ-ABL1+ ALL patients who have received TKI therapy (imatinib or dasatinib), all remained in remission for the period of study follow-up, suggesting that patients harboring this specific fusion respond well to TKIs.12,25
It is likely that acquisition of N-terminal dimerization domains of SFPQ facilitates oligomerization, resulting in transphosphorylation of the ABL1 kinase domain and signal transduction, as is the case for most ABL1 fusions.17,54,55 In line with this, we show that SFPQ-ABL1 expression is sufficient to transform cytokine-dependent cells and drive constitutive expression of P-CrkL, which can be inhibited by ABL1-targeting TKIs. Although SFPQ-ABL1 lacks the SH2 and SH3 domains of ABL1, which normally function in the negative regulation of wild-type ABL1 kinase,17 our data showed that restoration of these domains does not substantially alter the transforming capacity of SFPQ-ABL1. Instead, our experiments revealed that most of the key differences between SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 are the result of the fusion-specific N-terminal partner. Wild-type SFPQ functions to regulate pre-mRNA splicing,31,56 nuclear retention of RNA,29 and transcription,32-34 and our global phosphoproteomics analysis suggests that SFPQ-ABL1 maintains some of these intermolecular interactions, which may be important for its function but do not result in discernible abnormalities in splicing.
SFPQ-ABL1 was as effective as BCR-ABL1 in blocking cytokine withdrawal–induced cell death but comparatively weak at promoting proliferation in the absence of cytokine. SFPQ-ABL1 is localized in the nuclear compartment, a feature it shares with NUP214-ABL1, which occurs almost exclusively in T-ALL.57 NUP214-ABL1, localized to the nuclear pore complex, also has lower in vitro kinase activity, delayed transformation of Ba/F3 cells, and induction of longer latency leukemia in vivo, compared with BCR-ABL1.22,23 Critically, we found that nuclear localization does not, however, alter sensitivity to ABL1-targeting TKIs.
BCR-ABL1 activates PI3K/AKT signaling through multiple mechanisms, including GRB2/GAB2–mediated activation of PI3K47 and downregulation of SHIP1.58 Our data suggest that SFPQ-ABL1 does not exploit these mechanisms to activate PI3K/AKT signaling. Instead, SFPQ-ABL1 expression promoted GAB2 pS469 and pS612, which negatively regulate PI3K/AKT signaling.53 In addition, SHIP1 expression is not downregulated by SFPQ-ABL1, likely contributing to reduced PI3K/AKT pathway activation. Reduced PI3K/AKT signaling activation could, in turn, explain the reduced proliferative capacity of SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells. In contrast, we show that as with BCR-ABL1,59,60 SFPQ-ABL1 activates STAT5 in a JAK-independent manner. SFPQ-ABL1 is predominately localized in the nucleus, which raises the question of how this fusion phosphorylates predominately cytoplasmic unphosphorylated STAT5.61 We speculate one of two possible explanations for the mechanism of phosphorylation: (1) SFPQ-ABL1 directly phosphorylates unphosphorylated STAT5 in the nucleus, as unphosphorylated STAT5A has been shown to be imported into the nucleus62 ; or (2) the more likely scenario, that there is sufficient SFPQ-ABL1 expressed in the cytoplasm to phosphorylate STAT5.
We also identified key differences in how SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 engage the cell cycle machinery, further highlighting the molecular distinctions between these seemingly similar kinase-activating fusions. BCR-ABL1–expressing cells were enriched for phosphorylation of proteins involved in G1/S phase regulation, whereas phosphorylation of proteins regulating G2/M phase and DNA damage response was a feature of SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells. Enrichment of cell cycle proteins in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells is likely the result of its nuclear localization but did not confer a therapeutic sensitivity to PLK1 and DNA damage response inhibitors tested.
SFPQ-ABL1 and BCR-ABL1 both block cell death to transform cytokine-dependent cell lines. Dependencies on specific Bcl-2 family members for cell survival vary between driver fusions in B-ALL.63 BCR-ABL1 requires Mcl-1 for leukemia initiation and maintenance, but this functional dependency can be overcome by overexpression of Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL.64 These compensatory mechanisms that alter the balance of pro-survival Bcl-2 family proteins can potentially be exploited in combination therapies. Preclinical studies have shown that dual targeting of BCL-2 and MCL-1 may be effective in Ph+ and Ph-like ALL.65 We show that, as with BCR-ABL1,64 SFPQ-ABL1 maintains Mcl-1, as well as Bcl-xL, to promote cell survival, and this mediates sensitivity to ABT-263 and S-63845. We show that additional efficacy can be achieved when combining either of these agents with imatinib in SFPQ-ABL1–expressing cells.
This study highlights key functional and molecular differences between ABL1 fusions arising in B-ALL. The nuclear localization of SFPQ-ABL1 results in activation of signaling networks that are distinct from BCR-ABL1, but we show that the primary transformation event remains ABL1 kinase activation. We provide preclinical evidence that SFPQ-ABL1+ ALL patients will likely benefit from TKIs targeting ABL1.
Acknowledgments
The authors gratefully acknowledge the Research Genomics Facility of the Victorian Clinical Genetics Service and the Children’s Cancer Centre Tissue Bank (Murdoch Children’s Research Institute).
This work is supported by donations from the Children’s Cancer Foundation (Projects 131 and 132), a National Health and Medical Research Council Grant (1140626), and a SCOR Grant (7015-18) from the Lymphoma and Leukemia Society. The authors acknowledge the support of Perpetual Trustees and the Samuel Nissen Foundation, as well as the Steven Walter Children’s Cancer Foundation. S.B. was supported by a Cancer Council Victoria Postdoctoral Fellowship. S.L.K. is supported by a fellowship from the Victorian Cancer Agency. M.J.D. is funded by the Betty Smyth Centenary Fellowship in Bioinformatics. A.O. was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant (GNT119625). This work was also supported by the Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program.
Funding support for this article was provided by the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, USA SCOR Project Grant “Apoptosis Controllers,” Samuel Nissen Charitable Foundation “Translating Molecular Discoveries in Childhood Cancer into Improved Outcomes,” National Health and Medical Research Council Project Grant Unlocking hidden cancer drivers using transcriptome data. (APP1140626).
Authorship
Contribution: L.M.B. performed biological experiments, curated phosphoproteomics and RNA-seq data, prepared figures and wrote the first draft of the manuscript; S.H.-Z. and H.H. performed bioinformatics analysis of phosphoproteomics and RNA-seq data; T.S. performed immunofluorescence analysis and biological experiments; J.J.S. prepared samples for phosphoproteomics and performed mass spectrometry; R.C.B. contributed to molecular cloning; H.J.K. prepared samples for RNA-seq; N.M.D. and B.S. assisted in bioinformatics analysis and interpretation; S.B., R.J., A.I.W., S.L.K., and A.O. provided intellectual input to the study and manuscript; P.G.E. and M.J.D. conceived and supervised the study; and L.M.B., T.S., and P.G.E. wrote the final version of the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests. P.G.E., R.C.B and M.J.D. are recipients of payments through the WEHI Distribution of Net Commercial Income program. The laboratory of R.W.J. receives research support from F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., BMS, Astra Zeneca and MecRx. R.W.J. is a scientific consultant and shareholder in MecRx.
Correspondence: Paul G. Ekert, Precision Medicine, Children’s Cancer Institute, Lowy Cancer Centre, Sydney, NSW, Australia; e-mail: PEkert@ccia.org.au.
References
Author notes
M.J.D. and P.G.E. contributed equally to this study.
The mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE41 partner repository with the data set identifier PXD028925. Ba/F3 RNA-sequencing data are available at the Gene Expression Omnibus database (accession number GSE185860). Patient RNA-sequencing data are available from the European Genome-Phenome Archive (accession number EGAS00001004212).
The full-text version of this article contains a data supplement.