Furthermore, the position of the LMO2 breakpoints in T-ALL in the light of the occurrence of TCRD-LMO2 translocations in normal thymocytes points to a critical role for the exact breakpoint location in determining LMO2 activation levels and the consequent pressure for T-ALL development.
Moreover, Foxp3 could interact with LMO2 and affect the expression level of TAL1, which was in accordance with the findings in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Gene expression studies indicate activation of a subset of these genes-HOX11, TAL1, LYL1, LMO1, and LMO2-in a much larger fraction of T-ALL cases than those harboring activating chromosomal translocations.
Hematopoietic transcription factor LIM domain only 2 (LMO2), a member of the TAL1 transcriptional complex, plays an essential role during early hematopoiesis and is frequently activated in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) patients.
One patient developed acute T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia because of up-regulated expression of the proto-oncogene LMO-2 from insertional mutagenesis, but maintained a polyclonal T cell repertoire through chemotherapy and entered remission.
Accumulating evidence suggests that LMO1 and LMO2 act as oncogenic proteins in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, whereas LMO4 has recently been implicated in the genesis of breast cancer.
These T cell leukemias are clonally aneuploid, can be transplanted into irradiated recipient fish, and express the zebrafish orthologues of the human T-ALL oncogenes tal1/scl and lmo2, thus providing an animal model for the most prevalent molecular subgroup of human T-ALL.
We investigated the prognostic effect of the expression levels of eight oncogenic transcription factors--TLX1 (HOX11), TLX3 (HOX11L2), TAL1, TAL2, LYL1, OLIG2 (BHLHB1), LMO1, and LMO2--in 52 adults with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.
The gene encoding LIM-only 2 (LMO2), an oncogenic transcription factor, is frequently activated in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), but how LMO2 transforms primary hematopoietic cells to induce T-ALL remains an open question.McCormack et al. now show that, in mice, Lmo2 confers self-renewal potential on normally nonrenewing thymocyte progenitor cells, and this property is maintained over four serial transplantations when the cells are transplanted into irradiated mice that lack thymocytes.
In T-lymphocytes, aberrant LMO2 expression beyond those stages leads to T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, while in B cells LMO2 is also expressed in germinal center lymphocytes and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, where it predicts better clinical outcome.
Finally, we demonstrate that FOXP3 binds LMO2 in vitro, resulting in decreased interaction between LMO2 and TAL1, providing a molecular mechanism for FOXP3-mediated transcriptional modulation in T-ALL.
Thymic expression of the Tal1 and Lmo2 oncogenes in mice results in rapid development of T-ALL; and similar to T-ALL patients, more than half the leukemic mice develop spontaneous mutations in Notch1.
To account for the sharp contrast in rhom-2 expression seen in these T-ALLs, a model is proposed with a negative regulatory element in the T-ALLbcr locus that is disrupted in some of the cases leading to overexpression of rhom-2.
BACKGROUND The human LMO2 gene was first cloned from an acute T lymphocytic leukemia patient; it is primarily expressed in hematopoietic and vascular endothelial systems, and functions as a pivotal transcriptional regulator during embryonic hematopoiesis and angiogenesis.
Furthermore, we debate whether the integration near the LMO2 locus is sufficient to result in T-ALL-like proliferations or whether the gamma-retroviral viral expression of the therapeutic IL2RG gene contributes to leukemogenesis.
Seven patients developed acute leukemia [one acute myeloid leukemia (AML), four T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), and two primary T-ALL with secondary AML associated with a dominant clone with vector integration at the LMO2 (six T-ALL), MDS1 (two AML), or MN1 (one AML) locus].