Mechanisms associated with t(7;12) acute myeloid leukaemia: from genetics to potential treatment targets.
Denise RagusaLiza DijkhuisCristina PinaSabrina TosiPublished in: Bioscience reports (2023)
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), typically a disease of elderly adults, affects 8 children per million each year, with the highest paediatric incidence in infants aged 0-2 of 18 per million. Recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities contribute to leukaemia pathogenesis and are an important determinant of leukaemia classification. The t(7;12)(q36;p13) translocation is a high-risk AML subtype exclusively associated with infants and represents the second most common abnormality in this age group. Mechanisms of t(7;12) leukaemogenesis remain poorly understood. The translocation relocates the entire MNX1 gene within the ETV6 locus, but a fusion transcript is present in only half of the patients and its significance is unclear. Instead, research has focused on ectopic MNX1 expression, a defining feature of t(7;12) leukaemia, which has nevertheless failed to produce transformation in conventional disease models. Recently, advances in genome editing technologies have made it possible to recreate the t(7;12) rearrangement at the chromosomal level. Together with recent studies of MNX1 involvement using murine in vivo, in vitro, and organoid-based leukaemia models, specific investigation on the biology of t(7;12) can provide new insights into this AML subtype. In this review, we provide a comprehensive up-to-date analysis of the biological features of t(7;12), and discuss recent advances in mechanistic understanding of the disease which may deliver much-needed therapeutic opportunities to a leukaemia of notoriously poor prognosis.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- acute myeloid leukemia
- genome editing
- crispr cas
- liver failure
- end stage renal disease
- bone marrow
- dendritic cells
- chronic kidney disease
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- copy number
- deep learning
- risk factors
- immune response
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- peritoneal dialysis
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- hepatitis b virus
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- aortic dissection
- rna seq
- mechanical ventilation
- climate change
- genome wide analysis