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Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood

The most frequent targets of genetic alterations in human leukemias are transcription factor genes with essential functions in normal blood cell development. The Interferon Regulatory Factor 4 (IRF4) gene encodes a transcription factor important for key developmental stages of hematopoiesis, with kn...

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Autores principales: Adamaki, Maria, Lambrou, George I., Athanasiadou, Anastasia, Tzanoudaki, Marianna, Vlahopoulos, Spiros, Moschovi, Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3744475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23977280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072326
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author Adamaki, Maria
Lambrou, George I.
Athanasiadou, Anastasia
Tzanoudaki, Marianna
Vlahopoulos, Spiros
Moschovi, Maria
author_facet Adamaki, Maria
Lambrou, George I.
Athanasiadou, Anastasia
Tzanoudaki, Marianna
Vlahopoulos, Spiros
Moschovi, Maria
author_sort Adamaki, Maria
collection PubMed
description The most frequent targets of genetic alterations in human leukemias are transcription factor genes with essential functions in normal blood cell development. The Interferon Regulatory Factor 4 (IRF4) gene encodes a transcription factor important for key developmental stages of hematopoiesis, with known oncogenic implications in multiple myeloma, adult leukemias and lymphomas. Very few studies have reported an association of IRF4 with childhood malignancy, whereas high transcript levels have been observed in the more mature immunophenotype of ALL. Our aim was to investigate the expression levels of IRF4 in the diagnostic samples of pediatric leukemias and compare them to those of healthy controls, in order to determine aberrant gene expression and whether it extends to leukemic subtypes other than the relatively mature ALL subpopulation. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR methodology was used to investigate IRF4 expression in 58 children with acute leukemias, 4 leukemic cell lines and 20 healthy children. We show that aberrant IRF4 gene expression is implicated in a variety of leukemic subtypes; higher transcript levels appear in the more immature B-common ALL subtype and in T-cell than in B-cell leukemias, with the highest expression levels appearing in the AML group. Interestingly, we show that childhood leukemia, irrespective of subtype or cell maturation stage, is characterised by a minimum of approximately twice the amount of IRF4 gene expression encountered in healthy children. A statistically significant correlation also appeared to exist between high IRF4 expression and relapse. Our results show that ectopic expression of IRF4 follows the reverse expression pattern of what is encountered in normal B-cell development and that there might be a dose-dependency of childhood leukemia for aberrantly expressed IRF4, a characteristic that could be explored therapeutically. It is also suggested that high IRF4 expression might be used as an additional prognostic marker of relapse at diagnosis.
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spelling pubmed-37444752013-08-23 Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood Adamaki, Maria Lambrou, George I. Athanasiadou, Anastasia Tzanoudaki, Marianna Vlahopoulos, Spiros Moschovi, Maria PLoS One Research Article The most frequent targets of genetic alterations in human leukemias are transcription factor genes with essential functions in normal blood cell development. The Interferon Regulatory Factor 4 (IRF4) gene encodes a transcription factor important for key developmental stages of hematopoiesis, with known oncogenic implications in multiple myeloma, adult leukemias and lymphomas. Very few studies have reported an association of IRF4 with childhood malignancy, whereas high transcript levels have been observed in the more mature immunophenotype of ALL. Our aim was to investigate the expression levels of IRF4 in the diagnostic samples of pediatric leukemias and compare them to those of healthy controls, in order to determine aberrant gene expression and whether it extends to leukemic subtypes other than the relatively mature ALL subpopulation. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR methodology was used to investigate IRF4 expression in 58 children with acute leukemias, 4 leukemic cell lines and 20 healthy children. We show that aberrant IRF4 gene expression is implicated in a variety of leukemic subtypes; higher transcript levels appear in the more immature B-common ALL subtype and in T-cell than in B-cell leukemias, with the highest expression levels appearing in the AML group. Interestingly, we show that childhood leukemia, irrespective of subtype or cell maturation stage, is characterised by a minimum of approximately twice the amount of IRF4 gene expression encountered in healthy children. A statistically significant correlation also appeared to exist between high IRF4 expression and relapse. Our results show that ectopic expression of IRF4 follows the reverse expression pattern of what is encountered in normal B-cell development and that there might be a dose-dependency of childhood leukemia for aberrantly expressed IRF4, a characteristic that could be explored therapeutically. It is also suggested that high IRF4 expression might be used as an additional prognostic marker of relapse at diagnosis. Public Library of Science 2013-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3744475/ /pubmed/23977280 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072326 Text en © 2013 Adamaki et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Adamaki, Maria
Lambrou, George I.
Athanasiadou, Anastasia
Tzanoudaki, Marianna
Vlahopoulos, Spiros
Moschovi, Maria
Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title_full Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title_fullStr Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title_full_unstemmed Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title_short Implication of IRF4 Aberrant Gene Expression in the Acute Leukemias of Childhood
title_sort implication of irf4 aberrant gene expression in the acute leukemias of childhood
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3744475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23977280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072326
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