Identification of a leukemia-initiating stem cell in human mast cell leukemia

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Abstract

Mast cell leukemia (MCL) is a highly fatal malignancy characterized by devastating expansion of immature mast cells in various organs. Although considered a stem cell disease, little is known about MCL-propagating neoplastic stem cells. We here describe that leukemic stem cells (LSCs) in MCL reside within a CD34+/CD38− fraction of the clone. Whereas highly purified CD34+/CD38─ cells engrafted NSGhSCF mice with fully manifesting MCL, no MCL was produced by CD34+/CD38+ progenitors or the bulk of KIT+/CD34− mast cells. CD34+/CD38– MCL cells invariably expressed CD13 and CD133, and often also IL-1RAP, but did not express CD25, CD26 or CLL-1. CD34+/CD38– MCL cells also displayed several surface targets, including CD33, which was homogenously expressed on MCL LSCs in all cases, and the D816V mutant form of KIT. Although CD34+/CD38− cells were resistant against single drugs, exposure to combinations of CD33-targeting and KIT-targeting drugs resulted in LSC-depletion and markedly reduced engraftment in NSGhSCF mice. Together, MCL LSCs are CD34+/CD38− cells that express distinct profiles of markers and target antigens. Characterization of MCL LSCs should facilitate their purification and should support the development of LSC-eradicating curative treatment approaches in this fatal type of leukemia.

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Eisenwort, G., Sadovnik, I., Schwaab, J., Jawhar, M., Keller, A., Stefanzl, G., … Valent, P. (2019). Identification of a leukemia-initiating stem cell in human mast cell leukemia. Leukemia, 33(11), 2673–2684. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-019-0460-6

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