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Increased baseline RASGRP1 signals enhance stem cell fitness during native hematopoiesis
Author(s) -
Laila Karra,
Damià RomeroMoya,
Olga Ksionda,
Milana Krush,
Zhaohui Gu,
Marsilius Mues,
Philippe Depeille,
Charles G. Mullighan,
Jeroen P. Roose
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
oncogene
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.395
H-Index - 342
eISSN - 1476-5594
pISSN - 0950-9232
DOI - 10.1038/s41388-020-01469-8
Subject(s) - biology , haematopoiesis , bone marrow , cancer research , leukemia , progenitor cell , stem cell , context (archaeology) , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , immunology , paleontology
Oncogenic mutations in RAS genes, like KRAS G12D or NRAS G12D , trap Ras in the active state and cause myeloproliferative disorder and T cell leukemia (T-ALL) when induced in the bone marrow via Mx1CRE. The RAS exchange factor RASGRP1 is frequently overexpressed in T-ALL patients. In T-ALL cell lines overexpression of RASGRP1 increases flux through the RASGTP/RasGDP cycle. Here we expanded RASGRP1 expression surveys in pediatric T-ALL and generated a RoLoRiG mouse model crossed to Mx1CRE to determine the consequences of induced RASGRP1 overexpression in primary hematopoietic cells. RASGRP1-overexpressing, GFP-positive cells outcompeted wild type cells and dominated the peripheral blood compartment over time. RASGRP1 overexpression bestows gain-of-function colony formation properties to bone marrow progenitors in medium containing limited growth factors. RASGRP1 overexpression enhances baseline mTOR-S6 signaling in the bone marrow, but not in vitro cytokine-induced signals. In agreement with these mechanistic findings, hRASGRP1-ires-EGFP enhances fitness of stem- and progenitor- cells, but only in the context of native hematopoiesis. RASGRP1 overexpression is distinct from KRAS G12D or NRAS G12D , does not cause acute leukemia on its own, and leukemia virus insertion frequencies predict that RASGRP1 overexpression can effectively cooperate with lesions in many other genes to cause acute T-ALL.

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