Deregulated WNT signaling in childhood T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Author
Firtina, S.
Celkan, T.
Turkkan, E.
Yıldırmak, Y.
Timur, C.
Zengin, Emine
Van Dongen, J. J. M.
Staal, F. J. T.
Ozbek, U.
Karakas, Zeynep
Sayitoglu, M.
Aydogan, Gülcan
Ng, O. H.
Erbilgin, Y.
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Show full item recordAbstract
WNT signaling has been implicated in the regulation of hematopoietic stem cells and plays an important role during T-cell development in thymus. Here we investigated WNT pathway activation in childhood T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) patients. To evaluate the potential role of WNT signaling in T-cell leukomogenesis, we performed expression analysis of key components of WNT pathway. More than 85% of the childhood T-ALL patients showed upregulated beta-catenin expression at the protein level compared with normal human thymocytes. The impact of this upregulation was reflected in high expression of known target genes (AXIN2, c-MYC, TCF1 and LEF). Especially AXIN2, the universal target gene of WNT pathway, was upregulated at both mRNA and protein levels in similar to 40% of the patients. When beta-CATENIN gene was silenced by small interfering RNA, the cancer cells showed higher rates of apoptosis. These results demonstrate that abnormal WNT signaling activation occurs in a significant fraction of human T-ALL cases independent of known T-ALL risk factors. We conclude that deregulated WNT signaling is a novel oncogenic event in childhood T-ALL.
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