β-Catenin stabilization stalls the transition from double-positive to single-positive stage and predisposes thymocytes to malignant transformation

Author:

Guo Zhuyan1,Dose Marei1,Kovalovsky Damian1,Chang Rui1,O'Neil Jennifer2,Look A. Thomas2,von Boehmer Harald2,Khazaie Khashayarsha23,Gounari Fotini1

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Oncology Research Institute, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Boston;

2. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston;

3. Center for Molecular Imaging Research, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, MA

Abstract

AbstractActivation of β-catenin has been causatively linked to the etiology of colon cancer. Conditional stabilization of this molecule in pro-T cells promotes thymocyte development without the requirement for pre-TCR signaling. We show here that activated β-catenin stalls the developmental transition from the double-positive (DP) to the single-positive (SP) thymocyte stage and predisposes DP thymocytes to transformation. β-Catenin–induced thymic lymphomas have a leukemic arrest at the early DP stage. Lymphomagenesis requires Rag activity, which peaks at this developmental stage, as well as additional secondary genetic events. A consistent secondary event is the transcriptional up-regulation of c-Myc, whose activity is required for transformation because its conditional ablation abrogates lymphomagenesis. In contrast, the expression of Notch receptors as well as targets is reduced in DP thymocytes with stabilized β-catenin and remains low in the lymphomas, indicating that Notch activation is not required or selected for in β-catenin–induced lymphomas. Thus, β-catenin activation may provide a mechanism for the induction of T-cell–acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) that does not depend on Notch activation.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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