Aggressive natural killer-cell leukemia mutational landscape and drug profiling highlight JAK-STAT signaling as therapeutic target

Olli Dufva(University of Helsinki), Matti Kankainen(University of Helsinki), Tiina Kelkka(University of Helsinki), Nodoka Sekiguchi(Shinshu University), Shady Adnan Awad(University of Helsinki), Samuli Eldfors(University of Helsinki), Bhagwan Yadav(University of Helsinki), Heikki Kuusanmäki(University of Helsinki), Disha Malani(University of Helsinki), Emma Andersson(University of Helsinki), Paavo Pietarinen(University of Helsinki), Leena Saikko(University of Helsinki), Panu E. Kovanen(University of Helsinki), Teija Ojala(University of Helsinki), Dean A. Lee(Nationwide Children's Hospital), Thomas P. Loughran(University of Virginia), Hideyuki Nakazawa(Shinshu University), Junji Suzumiya(Shimane University Hospital), Ritsuro Suzuki(Shimane University Hospital), Young Hyeh Ko(Samsung Medical Center), Won Seog Kim(Samsung Medical Center), Shih‐Sung Chuang(Chi Mei Medical Center), Tero Aittokallio(University of Helsinki), Wing C. Chan(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Koichi Ohshima(Kurume University), Fumihiro Ishida(Shinshu University), Satu Mustjoki(University of Helsinki)
Nature Communications
April 13, 2018
Cited by 144Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Aggressive natural killer-cell (NK-cell) leukemia (ANKL) is an extremely aggressive malignancy with dismal prognosis and lack of targeted therapies. Here, we elucidate the molecular pathogenesis of ANKL using a combination of genomic and drug sensitivity profiling. We study 14 ANKL patients using whole-exome sequencing (WES) and identify mutations in STAT3 (21%) and RAS-MAPK pathway genes (21%) as well as in DDX3X (29%) and epigenetic modifiers (50%). Additional alterations include JAK-STAT copy gains and tyrosine phosphatase mutations, which we show recurrent also in extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type (NKTCL) through integration of public genomic data. Drug sensitivity profiling further demonstrates the role of the JAK-STAT pathway in the pathogenesis of NK-cell malignancies, identifying NK cells to be highly sensitive to JAK and BCL2 inhibition compared to other hematopoietic cell lineages. Our results provide insight into ANKL genetics and a framework for application of targeted therapies in NK-cell malignancies.


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