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IRF4 drives clonal evolution and lineage choice in a zebrafish model of T-cell lymphoma.

Stella AmandaTze King TanJolynn Zu Lin OngMadelaine Skolastika TheardyRegina Wan Ju WongXiao Zi HuangMuhammad Zulfaqar AliYan LiZhiyuan GongHiroshi InagakiEe Yong FooBrendan PangSoo Yong TanShinsuke IidaTakaomi Sanda
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
IRF4 is a master regulator of immunity and is also frequently overexpressed in mature lymphoid neoplasms. Here, we demonstrate the oncogenicity of IRF4 in vivo, its potential effects on T-cell development and clonal evolution using a zebrafish model. IRF4-transgenic zebrafish develop aggressive tumors with massive infiltration of abnormal lymphocytes that spread to distal organs. Many late-stage tumors are mono- or oligoclonal, and tumor cells can expand in recipient animals after transplantation, demonstrating their malignancy. Mutation of p53 accelerates tumor onset, increases penetrance, and results in tumor heterogeneity. Surprisingly, single-cell RNA-sequencing reveals that the majority of tumor cells are double-negative T-cells, many of which express tcr-γ that became dominant as the tumors progress, whereas double-positive T-cells are largely diminished. Gene expression and epigenetic profiling demonstrates that gata3, mycb, lrrn1, patl1 and psip1 are specifically activated in tumors, while genes responsible for T-cell differentiation including id3 are repressed. IRF4-driven tumors are sensitive to the BRD inhibitor.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • dendritic cells
  • rna seq
  • dna methylation
  • high throughput
  • transcription factor
  • regulatory t cells
  • stem cells
  • immune response
  • genome wide
  • minimally invasive
  • bone marrow
  • decision making