Despite substantial progress in the past two decades, cancer remains the leading cause of death by disease in US children between 1 and 15 years of age. Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood cancer, and cure rates are approaching approximately 80% today. Unfortunately, 20% of children with ALL are not cured with current therapy, making the number of cases of relapsed ALL greater than the total number of new cases of most childhood cancers. Previous work has established that de novo drug resistance is a primary cause of treatment failure in childhood ALL. However, the genomic determinants of such resistance remain poorly defined. We have recently identified a number of new genes that are expressed at a significantly different level in B-lineage ALL cells exhibiting de novo resistance to widely used antileukemic agents (prednisolone, vincristine, asparaginase, daunorubicin), and their pattern of expression was also significantly related to treatment outcome. To assess, three research aims that extend our prior findings. The first scientific aim is to identify genes conferring de novo resistance of childhood ALL to the widely used thiopurines, mercaptopurine and thioguanine. This will be the first genome-wide analysis of genes conferring thiopurine resistance and will provide important new insights into whether they represent distinct antileukemic agents.
The second aim i s to identify genes in T-ALL that confer de novo resistance to the four agents we have previously studied in B-lineage ALL (prednisolone, vincristine, asparaginase, daunorubicin) and the two thiopurines. This will yield pharmacogenomic insights into why T-ALL has a worse prognosis with most treatment protocols.
The final aim i s to identify germline polymorphisms or epigenetic changes in the promoter regions of those genes that are differentially expressed in ALL cells exhibiting resistance to these antileukemic agents. Preliminary studies have already identified a significant relation between mRNA expression in ALL cells and the promoter haplotype structure of the first gene investigated (SMARCB1). It is important to extend these pharmacogenomic studies in a systematic way to additional genes conferring de novo drug resistance. These findings will continue to provide important new insights into the genomic determinants of treatment failure and point to novel targets for developing strategies to overcome drug resistance in childhood ALL.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37)
Project #
5R37CA036401-24
Application #
7233118
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-DIG-F (02))
Program Officer
Wu, Roy S
Project Start
1984-07-01
Project End
2010-05-31
Budget Start
2007-06-01
Budget End
2008-05-31
Support Year
24
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$574,893
Indirect Cost
Name
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
067717892
City
Memphis
State
TN
Country
United States
Zip Code
38105
Diouf, Barthelemy; Lin, Wenwei; Goktug, Asli et al. (2018) Alteration of RNA Splicing by Small-Molecule Inhibitors of the Interaction between NHP2L1 and U4. SLAS Discov 23:164-173
Pui, Ching-Hon (2018) To delay or not to delay, that is the question for patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who do not receive prophylactic cranial irradiation. Cancer 124:4442-4446
Diouf, Barthelemy; Evans, William E (2018) Pharmacogenomics of Vincristine-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy: Progress Continues. Clin Pharmacol Ther :
Li, Jian-Feng; Dai, Yu-Ting; Lilljebjörn, Henrik et al. (2018) Transcriptional landscape of B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia based on an international study of 1,223 cases. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E11711-E11720
Heikamp, Emily B; Pui, Ching-Hon (2018) Next-Generation Evaluation and Treatment of Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. J Pediatr 203:14-24.e2
Dvorak, Christopher C; Satwani, Prakash; Stieglitz, Elliot et al. (2018) Disease burden and conditioning regimens in ASCT1221, a randomized phase II trial in children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia: A Children's Oncology Group study. Pediatr Blood Cancer 65:e27034
Luzum, J A; Pakyz, R E; Elsey, A R et al. (2017) The Pharmacogenomics Research Network Translational Pharmacogenetics Program: Outcomes and Metrics of Pharmacogenetic Implementations Across Diverse Healthcare Systems. Clin Pharmacol Ther 102:502-510
Karol, S E; Larsen, E; Cheng, C et al. (2017) Genetics of ancestry-specific risk for relapse in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Leukemia 31:1325-1332
Liu, C; Yang, W; Pei, D et al. (2017) Genomewide Approach Validates Thiopurine Methyltransferase Activity Is a Monogenic Pharmacogenomic Trait. Clin Pharmacol Ther 101:373-381
Landier, Wendy; Hageman, Lindsey; Chen, Yanjun et al. (2017) Mercaptopurine Ingestion Habits, Red Cell Thioguanine Nucleotide Levels, and Relapse Risk in Children With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Report From the Children's Oncology Group Study AALL03N1. J Clin Oncol 35:1730-1736

Showing the most recent 10 out of 258 publications