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Intronless WNT10B-short variant underlies new recurrent allele-specific rearrangement in acute myeloid leukaemia.


ABSTRACT: Defects in the control of Wnt signaling have emerged as a recurrent mechanism involved in cancer pathogenesis and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), including the hematopoietic regeneration-associated WNT10B in AC133bright leukaemia cells, although the existence of a specific mechanism remains unproven. We have obtained evidences for a recurrent rearrangement, which involved the WNT10B locus (WNT10BR) within intron 1 (IVS1) and flanked at the 5' by non-human sequences whose origin remains to be elucidated; it also expressed a transcript variant (WNT10BIVS1) which was mainly detected in a cohort of patients with intermediate/unfavorable risk AML. We also identified in two separate cases, affected by AML and breast cancer respectively, a genomic transposable short form of human WNT10B (ht-WNT10B). The intronless ht-WNT10B resembles a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA), which suggests its involvement in a non-random microhomology-mediated recombination generating the rearranged WNT10BR. Furthermore, our studies supports an autocrine activation primed by the formation of WNT10B-FZD4/5 complexes in the breast cancer MCF7 cells that express the WNT10BIVS1. Chemical interference of WNT-ligands production by the porcupine inhibitor IWP-2 achieved a dose-dependent suppression of the WNT10B-FZD4/5 interactions. These results present the first evidence for a recurrent rearrangement promoted by a mobile ht-WNT10B oncogene, as a relevant mechanism for Wnt involvement in human cancer.

SUBMITTER: Lazzaroni F 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5112549 | biostudies-other | 2016 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Intronless WNT10B-short variant underlies new recurrent allele-specific rearrangement in acute myeloid leukaemia.

Lazzaroni Francesca F   Del Giacco Luca L   Biasci Daniele D   Turrini Mauro M   Prosperi Laura L   Brusamolino Roberto R   Cairoli Roberto R   Beghini Alessandro A  

Scientific reports 20161117


Defects in the control of Wnt signaling have emerged as a recurrent mechanism involved in cancer pathogenesis and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), including the hematopoietic regeneration-associated WNT10B in AC133<sup>bright</sup> leukaemia cells, although the existence of a specific mechanism remains unproven. We have obtained evidences for a recurrent rearrangement, which involved the WNT10B locus (WNT10B<sup>R</sup>) within intron 1 (IVS1) and flanked at the 5' by non-human sequences whose ori  ...[more]

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