Paediatrics (RCH) - Research Publications

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    A novel MYB::PAIP1 oncogenic fusion in pediatric blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is dependent on BCL2 expression and is sensitive to venetoclax
    Kosasih, HJ ; Healey, G ; Brennan, MS ; Bjelosevic, S ; Sadras, T ; Jalud, FB ; Ibnat, T ; Ng, AP ; Mayoh, C ; Mao, J ; Tax, G ; Ludlow, LEA ; Johnstone, RW ; Herold, MJ ; Khaw, SL ; de Bock, CE ; Ekert, PG (WILEY, 2024-02)
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    Toblerone: detecting exon deletion events in cancer using RNA-seq.
    Lonsdale, A ; Halman, A ; Brown, L ; Kosasih, H ; Ekert, P ; Oshlack, A (F1000 Research Ltd, 2023)
    Cancer is driven by mutations of the genome that can result in the activation of oncogenes or repression of tumour suppressor genes. In acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) focal deletions in IKAROS family zinc finger 1 (IKZF1) result in the loss of zinc-finger DNA-binding domains and a dominant negative isoform that is associated with higher rates of relapse and  poorer patient outcomes. Clinically, the presence of IKZF1 deletions informs prognosis and treatment options. In this work we developed a method for detecting exon deletions in genes using RNA-seq with application to IKZF1. We developed a pipeline that first uses a custom transcriptome reference consisting of transcripts with exon deletions.  Next, RNA-seq reads are mapped using a pseudoalignment algorithm to identify reads that uniquely support deletions. These are then evaluated for evidence of the deletion with respect to gene expression and other samples. We applied the algorithm, named Toblerone, to a cohort of 99 B-ALL paediatric samples including validated IKZF1 deletions. Furthermore, we developed a graphical desktop app for non-bioinformatics users that can quickly and easily identify and report deletions in IKZF1 from RNA-seq data with informative graphical outputs.
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    Distinct Assemblies of Heterodimeric Cytokine Receptors Govern Stemness Programs in Leukemia
    Kan, WL ; Dhagat, U ; Kaufmann, KB ; Hercus, TR ; Nero, TL ; Zeng, AGX ; Toubia, J ; Barry, EF ; Broughton, SE ; Gomez, GA ; Benard, BA ; Dottore, M ; Shing, KS ; Boutzen, H ; Samaraweera, SE ; Simpson, KJ ; Jin, L ; Goodall, GJ ; Begley, CG ; Thomas, D ; Ekert, PG ; Tvorogov, D ; D'Andrea, RJ ; Dick, JE ; Parker, MW ; Lopez, AF (AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH, 2023-08-04)
    UNLABELLED: Leukemia stem cells (LSC) possess distinct self-renewal and arrested differentiation properties that are responsible for disease emergence, therapy failure, and recurrence in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Despite AML displaying extensive biological and clinical heterogeneity, LSC with high interleukin-3 receptor (IL3R) levels are a constant yet puzzling feature, as this receptor lacks tyrosine kinase activity. Here, we show that the heterodimeric IL3Rα/βc receptor assembles into hexamers and dodecamers through a unique interface in the 3D structure, where high IL3Rα/βc ratios bias hexamer formation. Importantly, receptor stoichiometry is clinically relevant as it varies across the individual cells in the AML hierarchy, in which high IL3Rα/βc ratios in LSCs drive hexamer-mediated stemness programs and poor patient survival, while low ratios mediate differentiation. Our study establishes a new paradigm in which alternative cytokine receptor stoichiometries differentially regulate cell fate, a signaling mechanism that may be generalizable to other transformed cellular hierarchies and of potential therapeutic significance. SIGNIFICANCE: Stemness is a hallmark of many cancers and is largely responsible for disease emergence, progression, and relapse. Our finding that clinically significant stemness programs in AML are directly regulated by different stoichiometries of cytokine receptors represents a hitherto unexplained mechanism underlying cell-fate decisions in cancer stem cell hierarchies. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1749.
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    TALLSorts: a T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia subtype classifier using RNA-seq expression data
    Gu, A ; Schmidt, B ; Lonsdale, A ; Jalaldeen, R ; Kosasih, HJ ; Brown, LM ; Sadras, T ; Ekert, PG ; Oshlack, A (ELSEVIER, 2023-12-13)
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    Advances in CAR T cell immunotherapy for paediatric brain tumours
    Rao, P ; Furst, L ; Meyran, D ; Mayoh, C ; Neeson, PJ ; Terry, R ; Khuong-Quang, D-A ; Mantamadiotis, T ; Ekert, PG (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2022-11-23)
    Brain tumours are the most common solid tumour in children and the leading cause of cancer related death in children. Current treatments include surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The need for aggressive treatment means many survivors are left with permanent severe disability, physical, intellectual and social. Recent progress in immunotherapy, including genetically engineered T cells with chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) for treating cancer, may provide new avenues to improved outcomes for patients with paediatric brain cancer. In this review we discuss advances in CAR T cell immunotherapy, the major CAR T cell targets that are in clinical and pre-clinical development with a focus on paediatric brain tumours, the paediatric brain tumour microenvironment and strategies used to improve CAR T cell therapy for paediatric tumours.
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    Enhancer retargeting of CDX2 and UBTF::ATXN7L3 define a subtype of high-risk B-progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia
    Kimura, S ; Montefiori, L ; Iacobucci, I ; Zhao, Y ; Gao, Q ; Paietta, EM ; Haferlach, C ; Laird, AD ; Mead, PE ; Gu, Z ; Stock, W ; Litzow, M ; Rowe, JM ; Luger, SM ; Hunger, SP ; Ryland, GL ; Schmidt, B ; Ekert, PG ; Oshlack, A ; Grimmond, SM ; Rehn, J ; Breen, J ; Yeung, D ; White, DL ; Aldoss, I ; Jabbour, EJ ; Pui, C-H ; Meggendorfer, M ; Walter, W ; Kern, W ; Haferlach, T ; Brady, S ; Zhang, J ; Roberts, KG ; Blombery, P ; Mullighan, CG (AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY, 2022-06-16)
    Transcriptome sequencing has identified multiple subtypes of B-progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) of prognostic significance, but a minority of cases lack a known genetic driver. Here, we used integrated whole-genome (WGS) and -transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq), enhancer mapping, and chromatin topology analysis to identify previously unrecognized genomic drivers in B-ALL. Newly diagnosed (n = 3221) and relapsed (n = 177) B-ALL cases with tumor RNA-seq were studied. WGS was performed to detect mutations, structural variants, and copy number alterations. Integrated analysis of histone 3 lysine 27 acetylation and chromatin looping was performed using HiChIP. We identified a subset of 17 newly diagnosed and 5 relapsed B-ALL cases with a distinct gene expression profile and 2 universal and unique genomic alterations resulting from aberrant recombination-activating gene activation: a focal deletion downstream of PAN3 at 13q12.2 resulting in CDX2 deregulation by the PAN3 enhancer and a focal deletion of exons 18-21 of UBTF at 17q21.31 resulting in a chimeric fusion, UBTF::ATXN7L3. A subset of cases also had rearrangement and increased expression of the PAX5 gene, which is otherwise uncommon in B-ALL. Patients were more commonly female and young adult with median age 35 (range,12-70 years). The immunophenotype was characterized by CD10 negativity and immunoglobulin M positivity. Among 16 patients with known clinical response, 9 (56.3%) had high-risk features including relapse (n = 4) or minimal residual disease >1% at the end of remission induction (n = 5). CDX2-deregulated, UBTF::ATXN7L3 rearranged (CDX2/UBTF) B-ALL is a high-risk subtype of leukemia in young adults for which novel therapeutic approaches are required.
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    TSTEM-like CAR-T cells exhibit improved persistence and tumor control compared with conventional CAR-T cells in preclinical models
    Meyran, D ; Zhu, JJ ; Butler, J ; Tantalo, D ; MacDonald, S ; Nguyen, TN ; Wang, M ; Thio, N ; D'Souza, C ; Qin, VM ; Slaney, C ; Harrison, A ; Sek, K ; Petrone, P ; Thia, K ; Giuffrida, L ; Scott, AM ; Terry, RL ; Tran, B ; Desai, J ; Prince, HM ; Harrison, SJ ; Beavis, PA ; Kershaw, MH ; Solomon, B ; Ekert, PG ; Trapani, JA ; Darcy, PK ; Neeson, PJ (AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE, 2023-04-05)
    Patients who receive chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells that are enriched in memory T cells exhibit better disease control as a result of increased expansion and persistence of the CAR-T cells. Human memory T cells include stem-like CD8+ memory T cell progenitors that can become either functional stem-like T (TSTEM) cells or dysfunctional T progenitor exhausted (TPEX) cells. To that end, we demonstrated that TSTEM cells were less abundant in infused CAR-T cell products in a phase 1 clinical trial testing Lewis Y-CAR-T cells (NCT03851146), and the infused CAR-T cells displayed poor persistence in patients. To address this issue, we developed a production protocol to generate TSTEM-like CAR-T cells enriched for expression of genes in cell replication pathways. Compared with conventional CAR-T cells, TSTEM-like CAR-T cells had enhanced proliferative capacity and increased cytokine secretion after CAR stimulation, including after chronic CAR stimulation in vitro. These responses were dependent on the presence of CD4+ T cells during TSTEM-like CAR-T cell production. Adoptive transfer of TSTEM-like CAR-T cells induced better control of established tumors and resistance to tumor rechallenge in preclinical models. These more favorable outcomes were associated with increased persistence of TSTEM-like CAR-T cells and an increased memory T cell pool. Last, TSTEM-like CAR-T cells and anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) treatment eradicated established tumors, and this was associated with increased tumor-infiltrating CD8+CAR+ T cells producing interferon-γ. In conclusion, our CAR-T cell protocol generated TSTEM-like CAR-T cells with enhanced therapeutic efficacy, resulting in increased proliferative capacity and persistence in vivo.
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    Unusual PDGFRB fusion reveals novel mechanism of kinase activation in Ph-like B-ALL
    Sadras, T ; Jalud, FBB ; Kosasih, HJJ ; Horne, CRR ; Brown, LMM ; El-Kamand, S ; de Bock, CEE ; McAloney, L ; Ng, APP ; Davidson, NMM ; Ludlow, LEA ; Oshlack, A ; Cowley, MJJ ; Khaw, SLL ; Murphy, JMM ; Ekert, PGG (SPRINGERNATURE, 2023-04)
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    Description of a novel subtype of acute myeloid leukemia defined by recurrent CBFB insertions
    Ryland, GL ; Umeda, M ; Holmfeldt, L ; Lehmann, S ; Herlin, MK ; Ma, J ; Khanlari, M ; Rubnitz, JE ; Ries, RE ; Kosasih, HJ ; Ekert, PG ; Goh, HN ; Tiong, IS ; Grimmond, SM ; Haferlach, C ; Day, RB ; Ley, TJ ; Meshinchi, S ; Ma, X ; Blombery, P ; Klco, JM (AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY, 2023-02-16)
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    ALLSorts: an RNA-Seq subtype classifier for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
    Schmidt, B ; Brown, LM ; Ryland, GL ; Lonsdale, A ; Kosasih, HJ ; Ludlow, LE ; Majewski, IJ ; Blombery, P ; Ekert, PG ; Davidson, NM ; Oshlack, A (ELSEVIER, 2022-07-26)
    B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is the most common childhood cancer. Subtypes within B-ALL are distinguished by characteristic structural variants and mutations, which in some instances strongly correlate with responses to treatment. The World Health Organisation (WHO) recognises seven distinct classifications, or subtypes, as of 2016. However, recent studies have demonstrated that B-ALL can be segmented into 23 subtypes based on a combination of genomic features and gene expression profiles. A method to identify a patient's subtype would have clear utility. Despite this, no publically available classification methods using RNA-Seq exist for this purpose. Here we present ALLSorts: a publicly available method that uses RNA-Seq data to classify B-ALL samples to 18 known subtypes and five meta-subtypes. ALLSorts is the result of a hierarchical supervised machine learning algorithm applied to a training set of 1223 B-ALL samples aggregated from multiple cohorts. Validation revealed that ALLSorts can accurately attribute samples to subtypes and can attribute multiple subtypes to a sample. Furthermore, when applied to both paediatric and adult cohorts, ALLSorts was able to classify previously undefined samples into subtypes. ALLSorts is available and documented on GitHub (https://github.com/Oshlack/AllSorts/).