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T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive variant of ALL with very rapid progression and poor prognosis that primarily affects children, adolescents, and young adults. The high-dose chemotherapies used to treat T-ALL are often highly toxic and life-threatening.1
T-ALL can be classified by unique gene expression signatures corresponding to different stages of T-cell developmental arrest, characterized by aberrant regulation of specific transcription factor oncogenes including, among others, the HOXA oncogene. HOXA overexpression is a feature of KMT2A-rearranged (KMT2A-R) T-cell leukemia and is considered a factor in the poor prognosis and reduced survival of immature leukemias.1
Runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) is a pivotal regulator for osteoblast and chondrocyte differentiation and bone development. There is limited evidence on the role of RUNX2 in normal hematopoiesis and T-cell development. A recently published study by Matthijssens et al.1 investigated the complex relationship of RUNX2 in the pathobiology of T-ALL. The key findings are summarized below.
The study used multiple analyses on several in vivo and in vitro datasets to explore the role of RUNX2 as a dependency factor and mediator of disease progression in high-risk T-ALL.
The study identified RUNX2 as a transcription factor that directly and indirectly activates and suppresses a broad spectrum of genes in high-risk T-ALL with KMT2A-R or immature/ETP immunophenotype. RUNX2 was identified as a direct target of the KMT2A chimeras. RUNX2 is essential for the survival of immature and KMT2A-R T-ALL cells in vitro and in vivo and isresponsible for cell cycle, metabolism, mitochondrial dynamics, biogenesis, and T-cell signaling, explaining its prosurvival role in T-ALL. The study also indicated the role of RUNX2 and its downstream targets for therapeutic intervention in immature and KMT2A-R T-ALL.
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