Recurrent SPI1 (PU.1) fusions in high-risk pediatric T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Masafumi SekiShunsuke KimuraTomoya IsobeKenichi YoshidaHiroo UenoYaeko Nakajima-TakagiChangshan WangLin LinAyana KonHiromichi SuzukiYusuke ShiozawaKeisuke KataokaYoichi FujiiYuichi ShiraishiKenichi ChibaHiroko TanakaTeppei ShimamuraKyoko MasudaHiroshi KawamotoKentaro OhkiMotohiro KatoYuki ArakawaKatsuyoshi KohRyoji HanadaHiroshi MoritakeMasaharu AkiyamaRyoji KobayashiTakao DeguchiYoshiko HashiiToshihiko ImamuraAtsushi SatoNobutaka KiyokawaAkira OkaYasuhide HayashiMasatoshi TakagiAtsushi ManabeAkira OharaKeizo HoribeMasashi SanadaAtsushi IwamaHiroyuki ManoSatoru MiyanoSeishi OgawaJunko TakitaPublished in: Nature genetics (2017)
The outcome of treatment-refractory and/or relapsed pediatric T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is extremely poor, and the genetic basis for this is not well understood. Here we report comprehensive profiling of 121 cases of pediatric T-ALL using transcriptome and/or targeted capture sequencing, through which we identified new recurrent gene fusions involving SPI1 (STMN1-SPI1 and TCF7-SPI1). Cases positive for fusions involving SPI1 (encoding PU.1), accounting for 3.9% (7/181) of the examined pediatric T-ALL cases, showed a double-negative (DN; CD4-CD8-) or CD8+ single-positive (SP) phenotype and had uniformly poor overall survival. These cases represent a subset of pediatric T-ALL distinguishable from the known T-ALL subsets in terms of expression of genes involved in T cell precommitment, establishment of T cell identity, and post-β-selection maturation and with respect to mutational profile. PU.1 fusion proteins retained transcriptional activity and, when constitutively expressed in mouse stem/progenitor cells, induced cell proliferation and resulted in a maturation block. Our findings highlight a unique role of SPI1 fusions in high-risk pediatric T-ALL.