Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2107249 | Cancer Cell | 2010 | 14 Pages |
SummaryThe molecular events underlying the progression of T-lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LBL) to acute T-lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) remain elusive. In our zebrafish model, concomitant overexpression of bcl-2 with Myc accelerated T-LBL onset while inhibiting progression to T-ALL. The T-LBL cells failed to invade the vasculature and showed evidence of increased homotypic cell-cell adhesion and autophagy. Further analysis using clinical biopsy specimens revealed autophagy and increased levels of BCL2, S1P1, and ICAM1 in human T-LBL compared with T-ALL. Inhibition of S1P1 signaling in T-LBL cells led to decreased homotypic adhesion in vitro and increased tumor cell intravasation in vivo. Thus, blockade of intravasation and hematologic dissemination in T-LBL is due to elevated S1P1 signaling, increased expression of ICAM1, and augmented homotypic cell-cell adhesion.
► T -LBL and T-ALL are distinct but related cancers of thymic lymphoblasts ► T-LBL cells show increased BCL2, impaired vasculature invasion, and autophagy ► Elevated S1P1 signaling and ICAM1 expression account for lack of T-LBL dissemination ► AKT activation promotes T-LBL dissemination, despite BCL2 overexpression