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Examining the cause of leukemia in trisomy 21

Cause of leukaemia in trisomy 21
Bone marrow smear from a child with Down syndrome who suffers from leukemia. The purple-colored leukemic blasts displace normal blood formation. Credit: Jan Klusmann, University Hospital Frankfurt

Leukemia (blood cancer) is a group of malignant and aggressive diseases of the blood-forming cells in the bone marrow. Very intensive chemotherapy and in some cases a bone marrow transplant are the only cure. Like all cancers, leukemia is caused by changes in the DNA, the heredity material present in human cells in the form of 46 chromosomes.

In many forms of leukemia, large parts of these chromosomes are altered. People with Down syndrome, who have three copies of chromosome 21 (trisomy 21) are highly vulnerable: the risk of developing aggressive Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) in the first four years of their life is more than 100 times greater for children with Down syndrome. Down syndrome is the most common congenital genetic disorder, affecting about one in 700 newborn babies.

RUNX1 transcription factor is responsible

The research group led by Professor Jan-Henning Klusmann, Director of the Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine at University Hospital Frankfurt, has now discovered how the additional chromosome 21 can promote AML. With the help of genetic scissors (CRISPR-Cas9), they examined each of the 218 genes on chromosome 21 for its carcinogenic effect. It emerged that the RUNX1 gene is responsible for the chromosome's specific carcinogenic properties.

In further analyses, the researchers were able to corroborate that only one particular variant—or isoform—of the gene promotes the development of leukemia. Klusmann explains, "Other RUNX1 isoforms were even able to prevent the cells from degenerating. This explains why RUNX1 has so far not stood out—in several decades of extensive cancer research."

The RUNX1 gene encodes a "transcription factor"—a protein responsible for regulating the activity of other genes. RUNX1 regulates many processes, including and early and late hematopoiesis, or blood formation. Disruption of this important regulator is therefore a key event in the development of AML.

"Thanks to our research results, we now have a better understanding of what happens in leukemogenesis," explains Klusmann, an expert in pediatric cancer. "The study underlines how important it is to examine all gene variants in carcinogenesis. In many cases, certain mutations in alter how these variants form," he says.

Development of more sophisticated therapeutic approaches

These insights are important for a better understanding of the complex mechanisms of carcinogenesis, as Klusmann explains, "In this way, we have laid the groundwork for developing more sophisticated therapeutic approaches. Through our , we now know exactly how the gene variant alters the blood cells. From there, we were able to use specific substances that block the disease mechanism."

The intention now is to further explore the effect of these substances for use in medical care. Klusmann says, "On the basis of our expertise, we now want to develop therapies to correct this malfunction. Applying them in will certainly take a few more years, but hopefully they will lead in the future to sparing our from intensive chemotherapy."

The research is published in the journal Blood.

More information: Sofia Gialesaki et al, RUNX1 isoform disequilibrium promotes the development of trisomy 21–associated myeloid leukemia, Blood (2022). DOI: 10.1182/blood.2022017619

Journal information: Blood
Citation: Examining the cause of leukemia in trisomy 21 (2023, March 10) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-03-leukemia-trisomy.html
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