AID overexpression leads to aggressive murine CLL and nonimmunoglobulin mutations that mirror human neoplasms
Author(s) -
Pablo Elías Morande,
XiaoJie Yan,
Julieta Sepúlveda-Yáñez,
Noé Seija,
María Elena Márquez,
Natalia Sotelo,
Cecilia Abreu,
Martina Crispo,
Gabriel Fernández-Graña,
Natalia Rego,
Thérence Bois,
Stephen P. Methot,
Florencia Palacios,
Victoria Remedi,
R. Kanti,
Alejandro Buschiazzo,
Javier M. Di Noia,
Marcelo A. Navarrete,
Nicholas Chiorazzi,
Pablo Oppezzo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2020008654
Subject(s) - chronic lymphocytic leukemia , cancer research , biology , mutation , gene , somatic hypermutation , leukemia , cytidine deaminase , activation induced (cytidine) deaminase , cancer , lymphoma , point mutation , immunology , b cell , genetics , antibody
Most cancers become more dangerous by the outgrowth of malignant subclones with additional DNA mutations that favor proliferation or survival. Using chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a disease exemplary of this process, and a model for neoplasms in general, we created transgenic mice overexpressing the enzyme, activation-induced deaminase (AID), whose normal function is to induce DNA mutations in B lymphocytes. AID allows normal B lymphocytes to develop more effective immunoglobulin (Ig)-mediated immunity, but also is able to mutate non-Ig genes, predisposing to cancer. In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), AID expression correlates with poor prognosis suggesting a role for this enzyme in disease progression. Nevertheless, direct experimental evidence identifying the specific genes that are mutated by AID and indicating that those genes are associated with disease progression is not available. To address this point, we overexpressed Aicda in a murine model of CLL (Em-TCL1). Analyses of TCL1/AID mice demonstrate a role for AID in disease kinetics, CLL-cell proliferation, and the development of cancer-related target mutations with canonical AID signatures in non-Igs genes. Notably, our mouse models can accumulate mutations in the same genes that are mutated in human cancers. Moreover, some of these mutations occur at homologous positions, leading to identical or chemically-similar amino acid substitutions as in human CLL and lymphoma.Together, these findings support a direct link between aberrant AID activity and CLL driver mutations that are then selected for their oncogenic effects, whereby AID promotes aggressiveness in CLL and other B-cell neoplasms.
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