The Wilms tumor gene (WT1) encodes for a zinc finger transcription factor which manifests as both tumor suppressive and oncogenic activities. Due to 3 translation start sites and alternative splicing at exon 5 and a lysine, threonine, and serine (KTS) motif, WT1 generates 12 major transcripts. WT1 expression is upregulated in ~90% of leukemia samples and is associated with chemoresistance and disease relapse. However, which WT1 transcripts are associated with chemoresistant has not been defined. We characterized that sWT1+/-, but not other transcripts decreased cell growth, downregulated CD71 expression, and conferred cytarabine resistance. Leukemia blast cells with low CD71 expression are relatively resistant to cytarabine, suggesting that CD71 could be used as a biomarker for cytarabine treatment. Subsequent RNAseq analysis revealed two transcription factors HOXA3 and GATA2 to be uniquely upregulated in sWT1+/-, but not in other transcripts. Consistent with the sWT1 +/- phenotype, HOXA3 or GATA2 overexpression decreased cell growth, reduced CD71 expression, and conferred cytarabine resistance. Real time-PCR analysis showed that overexpression of WT1 and GATA2 upregulates each other and HOXA3 expression; whereas overexpression of HOXA3 upregulates GATA2 expression. Furthermore, relapsed leukemia samples express a relatively higher level of HOXA3 and GATA2 compared to de novo AML samples in the BeatAML cohort. GATA2 and WT1 are also coexpressed in AML samples (TCGA AML and BeatAML). Interestingly, WT1 and GATA2 mutations are mutual exclusive in primary AML and MDS patient samples (TCGA AML, BeatAML, and MDS (MSKCC+ IWG, IPSSM, NEJM)). These data indicates sWT1+-, HOXA3, and GATA2 forms a transcript complex that regulate cytarabine sensitivity. As such, we have identified transcription factors and a biomarker for cytarabine sensitivity in AML.

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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