PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Identification of pluripotent and adult stem cell genes unrelated to cell cycle and associated with poor prognosis in multiple myeloma.

  • Alboukadel Kassambara,
  • Dirk Hose,
  • Jérôme Moreaux,
  • Thierry Rème,
  • Jennifer Torrent,
  • Jean François Rossi,
  • Hartmut Goldschmidt,
  • Bernard Klein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e42161

Abstract

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Gene expression-based scores used to predict risk in cancer frequently include genes coding for DNA replication, repair or recombination. Using two independent cohorts of 206 and 345 previously-untreated patients with Multiple Myeloma (MM), we identified 50 cell cycle-unrelated genes overexpressed in multiple myeloma cells (MMCs) compared to normal human proliferating plasmablasts and non-proliferating bone marrow plasma cells and which have prognostic value for overall survival. Thirty-seven of these 50 myeloma genes (74%) were enriched in genes overexpressed in one of 3 normal human stem cell populations--pluripotent (18), hematopoietic (10) or mesenchymal stem cells (9)--and only three genes were enriched in one of 5 populations of differentiated cells (memory B lymphocytes, T lymphocytes, polymorphonuclear cells, monocytes, osteoclasts). These 37 genes shared by MMCs and adult or pluripotent stem cells were used to build a stem cell score ((SC)score), which proved to be strongly prognostic in the 2 independent cohorts of patients compared to other gene expression-based risk scores or usual clinical scores using multivariate Cox analysis. This finding highlights cell cycle-unrelated prognostic genes shared by myeloma cells and normal stem cells, whose products might be important for normal and malignant stem cell biology.