4.2 Article

HTLV-1-infected CD4+T-cells display alternative exon usages that culminate in adult T-cell leukemia

Journal

RETROVIROLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12977-014-0119-3

Keywords

HTLV-1; Adult T-cell leukemia; Alternative splicing

Categories

Funding

  1. Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer (Comites de l'Ain, de la Drome, de la Saone et Loire, and du Rhone)
  2. Fondation de France
  3. Association Laurette Fugain
  4. Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (ARC)
  5. Association Guillaume Espoir
  6. Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (EPIVIR)
  7. bursaries from the French Ministry of Higher Education and Science
  8. INSERM
  9. Hospices Civils de Lyon (AVIESAN CHRT program)
  10. Hospices Civils de Lyon and Lyon I University (France)
  11. US NIH Grant [CA140474]
  12. American Lebanese-Syrian Associated Charities (USA)
  13. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (USA)

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Background: Reprogramming cellular gene transcription sustains HTLV-1 viral persistence that ultimately leads to the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). We hypothesized that besides these quantitative transcriptional effects, HTLV-1 qualitatively modifies the pattern of cellular gene expression. Results: Exon expression analysis shows that patients' untransformed and malignant HTLV-1(+) CD4(+) T-cells exhibit multiple alternate exon usage (AEU) events. These affect either transcriptionally modified or unmodified genes, culminate in ATLL, and unveil new functional pathways involved in cancer and cell cycle. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of array data permitted to isolate exon expression patterns of 3977 exons that discriminate uninfected, infected, and transformed CD4(+) T-cells. Furthermore, untransformed infected CD4+ clones and ATLL samples shared 486 exon modifications distributed in 320 genes, thereby indicating a role of AEUs in HTLV-1 leukemogenesis. Exposing cells to splicing modulators revealed that Sudemycin E reduces cell viability of HTLV-1 transformed cells without affecting primary control CD4+ cells and HTLV-1 negative cell lines, suggesting that the huge excess of AEU might provide news targets for treating ATLL. Conclusions: Taken together, these data reveal that HTLV-1 significantly modifies the structure of cellular transcripts and unmask new putative leukemogenic pathways and possible therapeutic targets.

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