Oncogenic RAS-pathway activation drives oncofetal reprogramming and creates therapeutic vulnerabilities in juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia

Autor/innen

  • Mark Hartmann
  • Maximilian Schoenung
  • Jovana Rajak
  • Valentin Maurer
  • Ling Hai
  • Katharina Bauer
  • Mariam Hakobyan
  • Sina Staeble
  • Jens Langstein
  • Laura Jardine
  • Roland Roelz
  • Sheila Bohler
  • Eleonora Khabirova
  • Abdul-Habib Maag
  • Dominik Vonficht
  • Dirk Lebrecht
  • Katrin M. Bernt
  • Kai Tan
  • Changya Chen
  • Fatemeh Alikarami
  • Tobias Boch
  • Viktoria Flore
  • Pavlo Lutsik
  • Michael D. Milsom
  • Simon Raffel
  • Christian Buske
  • Simon Haas
  • Muzlifah Haniffa
  • Jan-Philipp Mallm
  • Sam Behjati
  • Marc-Jan Bonder
  • Stefan Froehling
  • Charlotte M. Niemeyer
  • Joschka Hey
  • Christian Flotho
  • Christoph Plass
  • Miriam Erlacher
  • Matthias Schlesner
  • Daniel B. Lipka

Journal

  • bioRxiv

Quellenangabe

  • bioRxiv

Zusammenfassung

  • Aberrant fetal gene expression facilitates tumor-specific cellular plasticity by hijacking molecular programs of embryogenesis. Persistent fetal gene signatures in childhood malignancies are typically explained by their prenatal origins. In contrast, reactivation of fetal gene expression is considered a consequence of oncofetal reprogramming (OFR) in adult malignancies and is associated with aggressive disease. To date, OFR has not been described in the context of childhood malignancies. Here, we performed a comprehensive multi-layered molecular characterization of juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) and identified OFR as a hallmark of aggressive JMML. We observed that hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) aberrantly express mixed developmental programs in JMML. Expression of fetal gene signatures combined with a postnatal epigenetic landscape suggested OFR, which was validated in a JMML mouse model, demonstrating that postnatal activation of RAS signaling is sufficient to induce fetal gene signatures. Integrative analysis identified the fetal HSC maturation marker CD52 as a novel therapeutic target for aggressive JMML. Anti-CD52 treatment depleted human JMML HSCs and disrupted disease propagation in vivo. In summary, this study implicates OFR, defined as postnatal acquisition of fetal transcription signatures, in the pathobiology of a childhood malignancy. We provide evidence for the direct involvement of oncogenic RAS signaling in OFR. Finally, we demonstrate how OFR can be leveraged for the development of novel treatment strategies.


DOI

doi:10.1101/2023.10.27.563754