GATA1, cytidine deaminase, and the high cure rate of Down syndrome children with acute megakaryocytic leukemia

Y Ge, ML Stout, DA Tatman, TL Jensen… - Journal of the …, 2005 - academic.oup.com
Y Ge, ML Stout, DA Tatman, TL Jensen, S Buck, RL Thomas, Y Ravindranath, LH Matherly
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2005academic.oup.com
Down syndrome children with acute megakaryocytic leukemia (AMkL) have higher cure
rates than non-Down syndrome acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients treated with cytosine
arabinoside (ara-C). Megakaryoblasts from Down syndrome AML patients are more
sensitive in vitro to ara-C than cells from non-Down syndrome AML patients. Somatic
mutations in the GATA1 transcription factor have been detected exclusively and almost
uniformly in Down syndrome AMkL patients, suggesting a potential linkage to the …
Abstract
Down syndrome children with acute megakaryocytic leukemia (AMkL) have higher cure rates than non-Down syndrome acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients treated with cytosine arabinoside (ara-C). Megakaryoblasts from Down syndrome AML patients are more sensitive in vitro to ara-C than cells from non-Down syndrome AML patients. Somatic mutations in the GATA1 transcription factor have been detected exclusively and almost uniformly in Down syndrome AMkL patients, suggesting a potential linkage to the chemotherapy sensitivity of Down syndrome megakaryoblasts. Stable transfection of wild-type GATA1 cDNA into the Down syndrome AMkL cell line CMK resulted in decreased (8- to 17-fold) ara-C sensitivity and a threefold-lower generation of the active ara-C metabolite ara-CTP compared with that for mock-transfected CMK cells. High intracellular levels of uridine arabinoside (ara-U) (an inactive ara-C catabolite generated by cytidine deaminase) and cytidine deaminase transcripts were detected in GATA1-transfected CMK sublines, whereas no ara-U was detected in mock-transfected cells. Cytidine deaminase transcripts were a median 5.1-fold ( P = .002) lower in Down syndrome megakaryoblasts (n = 16) than in blast cells from non-Down syndrome patients (n = 56). These results suggest that GATA1 transcriptionally upregulates cytidine deaminase and that the presence or absence of GATA1 mutations in AML blasts likely confers differences in ara-C sensitivities due to effects on cytidine deaminase gene expression, which, in turn, contributes to the high cure rate of Down syndrome AMkL patients.
Oxford University Press