Spontaneous loss of B lineage transcription factors leads to pre-B leukemia in Ebf1+/-Bcl-xLTg mice

Oncogenesis. 2017 Jul 10;6(7):e355. doi: 10.1038/oncsis.2017.55.

Abstract

Early B-cell factor 1 (EBF1) plays a central role in B-cell lineage specification and commitment. Loss of this critical transcription factor is strongly associated with high-risk, relapsed and therapy-resistant B-cell-acute lymphoblastic leukemia, especially in children. However, Ebf1 haploinsufficient mice exhibit a normal lifespan. To determine whether prolonged survival of B cells would enable tumorigenesis in Ebf1 haploinsufficient animals, we generated Ebf1+/-Bcl-xLTg mice, which express the anti-apoptotic factor Bcl-xL in B cells. Approximately half of Ebf1+/-Bcl-xLTg mice develop aggressive oligoclonal leukemia as they age, which engrafts in congenic wild-type recipients without prior conditioning. The neoplastic cells display a pre-B phenotype and express early developmental- and natural killer cell/myeloid-markers inappropriately. In addition, we found tumor cell-specific loss of several transcription factors critical for maintaining differentiation: EBF1, TCF3 and RUNX1. However, in the majority of tumors, loss of Ebf1 expression was not due to loss of heterozygosity. This is the first spontaneous mouse model of pre-B leukemia to demonstrate inappropriate expression of non-B-cell-specific genes associated with loss of Ebf1, Tcf3 and Runx1 expression.