Cancers (Apr 2023)

The miR-141/200c-STAT4 Axis Contributes to Leukemogenesis by Enhancing Cell Proliferation in T-PLL

  • Moritz Otte,
  • Johanna Stachelscheid,
  • Markus Glaß,
  • Linus Wahnschaffe,
  • Qu Jiang,
  • Waseem Lone,
  • Aleksandr Ianevski,
  • Tero Aittokallio,
  • Javeed Iqbal,
  • Michael Hallek,
  • Stefan Hüttelmaier,
  • Alexandra Schrader,
  • Till Braun,
  • Marco Herling

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15092527
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 2527

Abstract

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T-prolymphocytic leukemia (T-PLL) is a rare and mature T-cell malignancy with characteristic chemotherapy-refractory behavior and a poor prognosis. Molecular concepts of disease development have been restricted to protein-coding genes. Recent global microRNA (miR) expression profiles revealed miR-141-3p and miR-200c-3p (miR-141/200c) as two of the highest differentially expressed miRs in T-PLL cells versus healthy donor-derived T cells. Furthermore, miR-141/200c expression separates T-PLL cases into two subgroups with high and low expression, respectively. Evaluating the potential pro-oncogenic function of miR-141/200c deregulation, we discovered accelerated proliferation and reduced stress-induced cell death induction upon stable miR-141/200c overexpression in mature T-cell leukemia/lymphoma lines. We further characterized a miR-141/200c-specific transcriptome involving the altered expression of genes associated with enhanced cell cycle transition, impaired DNA damage responses, and augmented survival signaling pathways. Among those genes, we identified STAT4 as a potential miR-141/200c target. Low STAT4 expression (in the absence of miR-141/200c upregulation) was associated with an immature phenotype of primary T-PLL cells as well as with a shortened overall survival of T-PLL patients. Overall, we demonstrate an aberrant miR-141/200c-STAT4 axis, showing for the first time the potential pathogenetic implications of a miR cluster, as well as of STAT4, in the leukemogenesis of this orphan disease.

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