Affiliation:
1. Departments of Cancer Genetics,1
2. Pediatrics,2
3. Molecular Immunology, 3 and
4. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 4 Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, New York 14263, and
5. Children’s Hospital of Buffalo, Buffalo, New York 142225
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The gene most commonly activated by chromosomal rearrangements in patients with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is SCL/tal. In collaboration with LMO1 or LMO2, the thymic expression of SCL/tal leads to T-ALL at a young age with a high degree of penetrance in transgenic mice. We now show that SCL LMO1 double-transgenic mice display thymocyte developmental abnormalities in terms of proliferation, apoptosis, clonality, and immunophenotype prior to the onset of a frank malignancy. At 4 weeks of age, thymocytes from SCL LMO1 mice show 70% fewer total thymocytes, with increased rates of both proliferation and apoptosis, than control thymocytes. At this age, a clonal population of thymocytes begins to populate the thymus, as evidenced by oligoclonal T-cell-receptor gene rearrangements. Also, there is a dramatic increase in immature CD44
+
CD25
−
cells, a decrease in the more mature CD4
+
CD8
+
cells, and development of an abnormal CD44
+
CD8
+
population. An identical pattern of premalignant changes is seen with either a full-length SCL protein or an amino-terminal truncated protein which lacks the SCL transactivation domain, demonstrating that the amino-terminal portion of SCL is not important for leukemogenesis. Lastly, we show that the T-ALL which develop in the SCL LMO1 mice are strikingly similar to those which develop in E2A null mice, supporting the hypothesis that SCL exerts its oncogenic action through a functional inactivation of E proteins.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
70 articles.
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