Age-Related Phenotypic And Oncogenic Differences In T-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemias May Reflect Thymic Atrophy

BLOOD(2004)

引用 108|浏览9
暂无评分
摘要
Postnatal thymic involution occurs progressively throughout the first 3 decades of life. It predominantly affects T-cell receptor (TCR) alphabeta-lineage precursors, with a consequent proportional increase in multipotent thymic precursors. We show that T-acute lymphoblastic leukemias (TALLs) demonstrate a similar shift with age from predominantly TCR expressing to an immature (IM0/delta/gamma) stage of maturation arrest. Half demonstrate HOX11, HOX11L2, SIL-TAL1, or CALM-AF10 deregulation, with each being associated with a specific, age-independent stage of maturation arrest. HOX11 and SIL-TAL represent alphabeta-lineage oncogenes, whereas HOX11L2 expression identifies an intermediate alphabeta/gammadelta-lineage stage of maturation arrest. In keeping with preferential up-lineage involution, the incidence of SIL-TAL1 and HOX11L2 deregulation decreased with age. In contrast, HOX11 deregulation became more frequent, suggesting longer latency. TAL1/LMO1 deregulation is more frequent in alphabeta-lineage T-ALL, when it is predominantly due to SIL-TAL1 rearrangements in children but to currently unknown mechanisms in adolescents and adults. LMO2 was more frequently coexpressed with LYL1, predominantly in IM0/delta/gamma adult cases, than with TAL1. These age-related changes in phenotype and oncogenic pathways probably reflect progressive changes in the thymic population at risk of malignant transformation. (C) 2004 by The American Society of Hematology.
更多
查看译文
关键词
lymphoblastic leukemias,oncogenic differences,age-related,t-cell
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要