B细胞急性淋巴细胞白血病的肥胖组学。

Delaney K Geitgey, Miyoung Lee, Kirsten A Cottrill, Maya Jaffe, William Pilcher, Swati Bhasin, Jessica Randall, Anthony J Ross, Michelle Salemi, Marisol Castillo-Castrejon, Matthew B Kilgore, Ayjha C Brown, Jeremy M Boss, Rich Johnston, Anne M Fitzpatrick, Melissa L Kemp, Robert English, Eric Weaver, Pritha Bagchi, Ryan Walsh, Christopher D Scharer, Manoj Bhasin, Joshua D Chandler, Karmella A Haynes, Elizabeth A Wellberg, Curtis J Henry
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肥胖疫情目前影响着7000多万美国人和全球6.5亿多人。除了增加对致病性感染(如SARS-CoV-2)的易感性外,肥胖还促进了许多癌症亚型的发展,并在大多数情况下增加了死亡率。我们和其他人已经证明,在B细胞急性淋巴细胞白血病(B-ALL)的背景下,脂肪细胞促进多药耐药性。此外,其他人已经证明,暴露于脂肪细胞分泌组的B-ALL细胞改变其代谢状态,以规避化疗介导的细胞毒性。为了更好地了解脂肪细胞如何影响人类B-ALL细胞的功能,我们使用了多组RNA测序(单细胞和大量转录组)和质谱(代谢组学和蛋白质组学)方法来定义正常和恶性B细胞中脂肪细胞诱导的变化。这些分析表明,脂肪细胞分泌组直接调节人类B-ALL细胞中与代谢、抗氧化应激保护、存活率增加、B细胞发育和化疗耐药性驱动因素相关的程序。对低脂肪和高脂肪饮食小鼠的单细胞RNA测序分析表明,肥胖抑制了免疫活性的B细胞亚群,并且B-ALL患者这种转录组特征的丧失与较差的生存结果有关。对健康捐赠者和B-ALL患者的血清和血浆样本的分析表明,肥胖与免疫球蛋白相关蛋白的循环水平较高有关,这支持了在肥胖小鼠中观察到的免疫稳态改变。总之,我们的多组学方法增加了我们对可能促进人类B-all化疗耐药性的途径的理解,并突出了患者中与生存结果相关的新的B细胞特异性特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The 'omics of obesity in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

The obesity pandemic currently affects more than 70 million Americans and more than 650 million individuals worldwide. In addition to increasing susceptibility to pathogenic infections (eg, SARS-CoV-2), obesity promotes the development of many cancer subtypes and increases mortality rates in most cases. We and others have demonstrated that, in the context of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), adipocytes promote multidrug chemoresistance. Furthermore, others have demonstrated that B-ALL cells exposed to the adipocyte secretome alter their metabolic states to circumvent chemotherapy-mediated cytotoxicity. To better understand how adipocytes impact the function of human B-ALL cells, we used a multi-omic RNA-sequencing (single-cell and bulk transcriptomic) and mass spectroscopy (metabolomic and proteomic) approaches to define adipocyte-induced changes in normal and malignant B cells. These analyses revealed that the adipocyte secretome directly modulates programs in human B-ALL cells associated with metabolism, protection from oxidative stress, increased survival, B-cell development, and drivers of chemoresistance. Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of mice on low- and high-fat diets revealed that obesity suppresses an immunologically active B-cell subpopulation and that the loss of this transcriptomic signature in patients with B-ALL is associated with poor survival outcomes. Analyses of sera and plasma samples from healthy donors and those with B-ALL revealed that obesity is associated with higher circulating levels of immunoglobulin-associated proteins, which support observations in obese mice of altered immunological homeostasis. In all, our multi-omics approach increases our understanding of pathways that may promote chemoresistance in human B-ALL and highlight a novel B-cell-specific signature in patients associated with survival outcomes.

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CiteScore
6.30
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