Title: Severe Congenital Neutropenia Kostmanns Syndrome
1Severe Congenital Neutropenia (Kostmanns
Syndrome)
- First described by Kostmann in 1956.
- Clinical manifestations
- Chronic severe neutropenia present at birth
- Accumulation of granulocytic precursors in the
bone marrow - Rare (1 in 100,000)
- Inherited in a sporadic, autosomal dominant, and
autosomal recessive fashion - A randomized trial has confirmed the efficacy of
G-CSF to increase neutrophil counts and reduce
the incidence and severity of infections.
2Bone Marrow Examination
Normal
SCN
- Cardinal feature of SCN Isolated block in
granulocytic differentiation
3SCN and MDS/AML
- Cumulative risk of leukemia (all types) up to age
40 - 1 in 639 (0.16) for men
- 1 in 794 (0.13) for women
- Cumulative risk of MDS/AML is 11.7 in SCN
- 9 for patients on G-CSF for lt6 years
- 23 for patients on G-CSF between 6 10 years
- 33 for patients on G-CSF gt10 years
ACS Cancer Facts Figures 2003
Rosenberg et al, Blood 2003102350a
4Bone Marrow Failure is a Pre-Leukemic Condition
- High frequency of chromosome 7 abnormalities in
AML arising in the setting of bone marrow
failure (35-68) versus de novo AML (5)
5Cell Culture Studies in SCN
- Cell intrinsic defect in the granulocytic
differentiation of progenitor cells - Decreased responsiveness of progenitors to
granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) - Increased apoptosis of granulocytic cells upon
growth factor deprivation
6Genetic Mutations Implicated in the Pathogenesis
of SCN
7G-CSFR Mutations in SCN
- G-CSF receptor
- Member of cytokine receptor superfamily
- Only known receptor for G-CSF
- G-CSF receptor mutations in SCN
- Acquired heterozygous mutations
- d715 (Q716X) mutation first described by Dong et.
- Result in loss of 3 of 4 cytoplasmic tyrosines.
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
Box 1
-Y
-Y
Box 2
-Y
-Y
-Y
G-CSFR
d715
8G-CSFR Mutations in SCN
- G-CSFR mutations are acquired!
- 30 of SCN patients have G-CSF receptor
mutations - These mutations are strongly associated with
development of MDS and AML - Collectively, 17/21 patients with MDS/AML have
G-CSFR mutations. - Mutations are rare in de novo AML
- 1 of 58 cases tested
9Questions
- How do cells expressing the mutant G-CSFR gain
clonal dominance? - Why are premature truncation mutations of the
G-CSFR only seen in the setting of SCN? - Do G-CSFR mutations contribute to leukemogenesis?
- Should the detection of mutant G-CSFR lead
immediately to transplant for these patients?
10d715 G-CSFR Mice Summary
- Normal basal granulopoiesis
- No block in granulocytic differentiation
- Increased responsiveness to G-CSF
- Exaggerated blood neutrophil response to G-CSF
treatment - The number of myeloid progenitors and their in
vitro proliferative response to G-CSF is
increased - Altered G-CSF signaling
- Delayed receptor internalization
- Accentuated activation of STAT5
- Impaired activation of SOC3, SHP2, SHIP and
possibly lyn
11(No Transcript)
12Competitive Repopulation Assay
1,000 cGy
Wild type host (Ly 5.1)
Donor
(d715 Ly 5.2)
Hematologic Recovery
and
(6 months)
(Wild-type Ly 5.1)
11 Ratio of Bone Marrow Cells
Bone Marrow Chimera
(5 x 106 cells)
13Flow Cytometry Assay
61.8
51.0
14d715 Chimeras 6 months after transplantation11
transplantation ratio
63.5
46.6
50.0
45.7
15d715 Chimeras G-CSF (10ug/kg/d x 21 days)
BM 63.3 89.1
BM 75.8 98.6
T cell
Neutrophil
61.1 68.4
49.7 60.5
52.6 97.6
16Analysis of Stem Cell Compartment
c-Kit
Sca-1
Untreated
G-CSF treated
17d715 Chimeras G-CSF (10ug/kg/d x 21 days)
53.3 97.8
61.1 68.4
49.7 60.5
52.6 97.6
18d715 ChimerasSecondary Transplants2 months post
transplant
48.6
34.4
74.8
64.8
19Wild Type Mice
Hoechst Staining
C-Kit
Sca-1
Lineage
20D715 G-CSFR Mice
Hoechst Staining
C-Kit
Sca-1
Lineage
21Questions
- How do cells expressing the mutant G-CSFR gain
clonal dominance? - Why are premature truncation mutations of the
G-CSFR only seen in the setting of SCN? - Do G-CSFR mutations contribute to leukemogenesis?
- Should the detection of mutant G-CSFR lead
immediately to transplant for these patients?
The G-CSFR mutations confer a growth and/or
survival advantage at the hematopoietic stem cell
level.
The G-CSFR mutations are dependent upon G-CSF.
In SCN systemic levels of G-CSF are high.
22Two-hit Model of Acute Leukemia
23Chimeric Transcription Factor
RTK Signal
Leukemia
24d715 Tumor Watch
The d715 G-CSFR is not sufficient to induce AML
or MDS in mice even with chronic G-CSF stimulation
25d715 Tumor Watch
26Questions
- How do cells expressing the mutant G-CSFR gain
clonal dominance? - Why are premature truncation mutations of the
G-CSFR only seen in the setting of SCN? - Do G-CSFR mutations contribute to leukemogenesis?
- Should the detection of mutant G-CSFR lead
immediately to transplant for these patients?
The G-CSFR mutations confer a growth and/or
survival advantage at the hematopoietic stem cell
level.
The G-CSFR mutations are dependent upon G-CSF.
In SCN systemic levels of G-CSF are high.
?