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  • Activating mutations in the NT5C2 nucleotidase gene drive chemotherapy resistance in relapsed ALL.

Activating mutations in the NT5C2 nucleotidase gene drive chemotherapy resistance in relapsed ALL.

Nature medicine (2013-02-05)
Gannie Tzoneva, Arianne Perez-Garcia, Zachary Carpenter, Hossein Khiabanian, Valeria Tosello, Maddalena Allegretta, Elisabeth Paietta, Janis Racevskis, Jacob M Rowe, Martin S Tallman, Maddalena Paganin, Giuseppe Basso, Jana Hof, Renate Kirschner-Schwabe, Teresa Palomero, Raul Rabadan, Adolfo Ferrando
ABSTRACT

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is an aggressive hematological tumor resulting from the malignant transformation of lymphoid progenitors. Despite intensive chemotherapy, 20% of pediatric patients and over 50% of adult patients with ALL do not achieve a complete remission or relapse after intensified chemotherapy, making disease relapse and resistance to therapy the most substantial challenge in the treatment of this disease. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identify mutations in the cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase II gene (NT5C2), which encodes a 5'-nucleotidase enzyme that is responsible for the inactivation of nucleoside-analog chemotherapy drugs, in 20/103 (19%) relapse T cell ALLs and 1/35 (3%) relapse B-precursor ALLs. NT5C2 mutant proteins show increased nucleotidase activity in vitro and conferred resistance to chemotherapy with 6-mercaptopurine and 6-thioguanine when expressed in ALL lymphoblasts. These results support a prominent role for activating mutations in NT5C2 and increased nucleoside-analog metabolism in disease progression and chemotherapy resistance in ALL.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
6-Mercaptopurine monohydrate, 98%
Sigma-Aldrich
5′-Nucleotidase human, recombinant, expressed in CHO cells, vial of 6-12 μg
Sigma-Aldrich
6-Thioguanine, ≥98%
Sigma-Aldrich
6-Thioguanine, Hybri-Max, 50 ×, γ-irradiated, lyophilized powder, BioXtra, suitable for hybridoma