• Biologie

  • Aberrations chromosomiques

  • Leucémie

Identification of functional cooperative mutations of SETD2 in human acute leukemia

Menée initialement sur deux patientes pédiatriques jumelles monozygotes dont l'une est atteinte d'une leucémie aiguë, puis sur une cohorte complémentaire de 241 patients, cette étude met en évidence le rôle joué des mutations du gène SETD2, codant pour une méthyltransférase, dans le développement de la maladie

Acute leukemia characterized by chromosomal rearrangements requires additional molecular disruptions to develop into full-blown malignancy, yet the cooperative mechanisms remain elusive. Using whole-genome sequencing of a pair of monozygotic twins discordant for MLL (also called KMT2A) gene–rearranged leukemia, we identified a transforming MLL-NRIP3 fusion gene3 and biallelic mutations in SETD2 (encoding a histone H3K36 methyltransferase). Moreover, loss-of-function point mutations in SETD2 were recurrent (6.2%) in 241 patients with acute leukemia and were associated with multiple major chromosomal aberrations. We observed a global loss of H3K36 trimethylation (H3K36me3) in leukemic blasts with mutations in SETD2. In the presence of a genetic lesion, downregulation of SETD2 contributed to both initiation and progression during leukemia development by promoting the self-renewal potential of leukemia stem cells. Therefore, our study provides compelling evidence for SETD2 as a new tumor suppressor. Disruption of the SETD2-H3K36me3 pathway is a distinct epigenetic mechanism for leukemia development.

Nature Genetics

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