Biological and therapeutic implications of a unique subtype of NPM1 mutated AML

Author:

Mer Arvind SinghORCID,Heath Emily M.,Madani Tonekaboni Seyed Ali,Dogan-Artun Nergiz,Nair Sisira Kadambat,Murison Alex,Garcia-Prat Laura,Shlush LiranORCID,Hurren Rose,Voisin Veronique,Bader Gary D.ORCID,Nislow CoreyORCID,Rantalainen Mattias,Lehmann Soren,Gower Mark,Guidos Cynthia J.ORCID,Lupien Mathieu,Dick John E.ORCID,Minden Mark D.,Schimmer Aaron D.ORCID,Haibe-Kains BenjaminORCID

Abstract

AbstractIn acute myeloid leukemia (AML), molecular heterogeneity across patients constitutes a major challenge for prognosis and therapy. AML with NPM1 mutation is a distinct genetic entity in the revised World Health Organization classification. However, differing patterns of co-mutation and response to therapy within this group necessitate further stratification. Here we report two distinct subtypes within NPM1 mutated AML patients, which we label as primitive and committed based on the respective presence or absence of a stem cell signature. Using gene expression (RNA-seq), epigenomic (ATAC-seq) and immunophenotyping (CyToF) analysis, we associate each subtype with specific molecular characteristics, disease differentiation state and patient survival. Using ex vivo drug sensitivity profiling, we show a differential drug response of the subtypes to specific kinase inhibitors, irrespective of the FLT3-ITD status. Differential drug responses of the primitive and committed subtype are validated in an independent AML cohort. Our results highlight heterogeneity among NPM1 mutated AML patient samples based on stemness and suggest that the addition of kinase inhibitors to the treatment of cases with the primitive signature, lacking FLT3-ITD, could have therapeutic benefit.

Funder

Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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