Epigenetic alterations affecting hematopoietic regulatory networks as drivers of mixed myeloid/lymphoid leukemia

Author:

Mulet-Lazaro RogerORCID,van Herk StanleyORCID,Nuetzel Margit,Sijs-Szabo Aniko,Díaz NoeliaORCID,Kelly Katherine,Erpelinck-Verschueren ClaudiaORCID,Schwarzfischer-Pfeilschifter Lucia,Stanewsky Hanna,Ackermann Ute,Glatz Dagmar,Raithel Johanna,Fischer AlexanderORCID,Pohl Sandra,Rijneveld Anita,Vaquerizas Juan M.ORCID,Thiede Christian,Plass Christoph,Wouters Bas J.ORCID,Delwel RuudORCID,Rehli MichaelORCID,Gebhard Claudia

Abstract

AbstractLeukemias with ambiguous lineage comprise several loosely defined entities, often without a clear mechanistic basis. Here, we extensively profile the epigenome and transcriptome of a subgroup of such leukemias with CpG Island Methylator Phenotype. These leukemias exhibit comparable hybrid myeloid/lymphoid epigenetic landscapes, yet heterogeneous genetic alterations, suggesting they are defined by their shared epigenetic profile rather than common genetic lesions. Gene expression enrichment reveals similarity with early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia and a lymphoid progenitor cell of origin. In line with this, integration of differential DNA methylation and gene expression shows widespread silencing of myeloid transcription factors. Moreover, binding sites for hematopoietic transcription factors, including CEBPA, SPI1 and LEF1, are uniquely inaccessible in these leukemias. Hypermethylation also results in loss of CTCF binding, accompanied by changes in chromatin interactions involving key transcription factors. In conclusion, epigenetic dysregulation, and not genetic lesions, explains the mixed phenotype of this group of leukemias with ambiguous lineage. The data collected here constitute a useful and comprehensive epigenomic reference for subsequent studies of acute myeloid leukemias, T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias and mixed-phenotype leukemias.

Funder

KWF Kankerbestrijding

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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