Abstract
There is growing evidence for an inherited basis of susceptibility to childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Genomewide association studies by us and others have identified non-coding acute lymphoblastic leukemia risk variants at the ARID5B gene locus, but the molecular mechanisms linking ARID5B to normal and malignant hematopoiesis remain largely unknown. Using a Vav1-driven transgenic mouse model, we characterized the role of Arid5b in hematopoiesis in vivo. Arid5b overexpression resulted in a dramatic reduction in the proportion of circulating B cells, immature, and mature Bcell fractions in the peripheral blood and the bone marrow, and also a decrease of follicular B cells in the spleen. There were significant defects in B-cell activation upon Arid5b overexpression in vitro with hyperactivation of B-cell receptor signaling at baseline. In addition, increased mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate of naïve or stimulated B cells of Arid5b-overexpressing mice was observed, compared to the rate of wild-type counterparts. Taken together, our results indicate that ARID5B may play an important role in B-cell development and function.
Introduction
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common cancer in children, with an incidence peaking between 3 and 5 years of age.1,2 Its early onset suggested a possible role of inherited genetic variations in susceptibility to ALL,3 a possibility which is also supported by studies in monozy-gotic twins with concordant ALL.4-6 Moreover, recent efforts by us and others in genome-wide association studies have provided unequivocal evidence for the genetic basis of ALL susceptibility, with more than 20 risk loci having been identified.7-1 9 Among them, ARID5B consistently exhibits the strongest association signal across racial and ethnic groups,9,12,16 with the risk variants specifically predisposing children to high-hyperdiploid ALL, in an age-related fashion. There is also emerging evidence that these non-coding variants can directly influence ARID5B transcription in cis.20 By contrast, there has been a particular paucity of studies investigating the functions of ARID5B in hematopoiesis and how it influences B-cell biology.
ARID5B belongs to the AT rich interaction domain (ARID) protein family consisting of 15 members and characterized by a shared DNA-binding ARID domain.21-24 Shortly after the identification of the ARID5B gene, its in vivo expression was characterized.25 A broad biological function of Arid5b has been indicated by its wide expression in adult organs including lung, small intestine, kidney, muscle, heart, and brain. In the same study, consequences of silencing Arid5b were also investigated. Deficiency of Arid5b led to smaller body size and leanness at birth and reduced growth rate after birth. In the hematopoietic compartment, Arid5b-/-mice exhibited a range of transient defects in lymphocyte development, including reduction of cellularity in bone marrow, thymus, and spleen, and significant decreases in early T- and B-cell progenitors in the bone marrow of 3-week-old mice, while most of these abnormalities disappeared at 6 weeks old.25 The leanness phenotype of the Arid5b-/- mouse was confirmed in another mouse model presenting with severely less brown adipose at birth, which could not be rescued by high-fat diets directly and is therefore implicated in adipogenesis.26 The nuclear localization and superior binding affinity of ARID5B to the A/T-rich consensus sequence (AATA[C/T])21,27 point to a potential function as a transcription factor. Indeed, by forming a complex with PHF2, ARID5B can regulate glucose metabolism by activating the expression of PEPCK and G6PC in hepatocytes.28 In natural killer (NK) cells, downregulation of ARID5B represses UQCRB expression and decreases mi-tochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial oxi-dative metabolism, along with BCL2 downregulation.29 In T-ALL cells, the genome-wide binding profile of ARID5B-bound regions is strongly associated with active histone markers (H3K27ac and H3K4me3), pointing to ARID5B acting as a transcriptional activator.30
In this study, we established mouse models with over-expression and knockout of Arid5b in hematopoietic cells. Using these tools, we comprehensively evaluated the roles of ARID5B in hematopoiesis in vivo, especially B-cell development, providing new insights into its potential contribution to leukemia pathogenesis.
Methods
Arid5b mouse models
To establish the Arid5b-overexpression mouse model, we first knocked in the tetO cassette at the Arid5b locus. These mice were then crossed with Vav1-tTA animals (Online Supplementary Figure S1A) to induce Arid5b over-expression in hematopoietic cells (Vav1+). Tail biopsies were submitted to Transnetyx (Cordova, TN, USA) for genotyping. Animal experiments were performed according to procedures approved by the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Primers used for genotyping are detailed in Online Supplementary Table S1. Overexpression of Arid5b was confirmed by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in different hematopoietic cells. Primers used for the polymerase chain reaction are detailed in Online Supplementary Table S2.
Analysis of peripheral blood counts
Peripheral blood was collected from the retro-orbital plexus into capillary tubes and transferred into EDTA-coated tubes to prevent clotting. Blood samples were then submitted to St. Jude Veterinary Pathology Core for automated complete blood counting.
Flow cytometry
Peripheral blood was collected from the retro-orbital plexus of the mice. Bone marrow was isolated from dissected tibiae and femora. Spleens were surgically removed and homogenized into a cell suspension in Iscove modified Dulbecco medium. Cells were stained for surface markers followed by flow cytometry analysis using a BD LSR For-tessa (BD Biosciences, NJ, USA) and data were analyzed using FlowJo software (Tree Star, OR, USA). For cell cycle analysis, cells were fixed with the BD Cytofix/Cytoperm kit (BD Biosciences #554714) after cell surface staining followed by DAPI staining. Staining of apoptotic cells was done by cell surface staining, followed by labeling with an-nexin V (BD Biosciences #556420) and DAPI in annexin V staining buffer (BD Biosciences #556454). Representative flow cytometry plots are shown in Online Supplementary Figures S2-S4. Detailed information on the antibodies used is provided in Online Supplementary Table S3.
Colony-forming assay
Mouse bone marrow cells were plated in MethoCult M3434 or M3630 medium (StemCell Technologies #03434 and #03630, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) to characterize growth and differentiation of myeloid progenitors and pre-B-cell progenitors. Colonies were typed and enumerated by light microscopy after incubation for 7-10 days.
B-cell purification and activation
Splenic cell suspensions were prepared in magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS) buffer (phosphate-buffered saline/2 mM EDTA/0.5% bovine serum albumin). CD43-negative resting B cells were isolated using the MACS B-cell isolation kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany). Resting B cells were then activated either by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Salmonella enterica se-rotype typhimurium (Sigma-Aldrich #L6143, MO, USA) at 20 µg/mL or AffiniPure F(ab')2 Fragment Goat Anti-Mouse IgM, µ Chain Specific (Jackson Immunoresearch Lab, PA, USA) at 10 µg/mL plus murine interleukin (IL)-4 (Peprotech # 214-14, NJ, USA) at 10 ng/mL at 400,000 cells/mL for 24 or 48 hours in RPMI 1640 (ThermoFisher #11875093), 1 × L-glutamine, 10% fetal bovine serum, 1 × essential amino acids, 1 × penicillin/streptomycin, 1 mM sodium pyruvate and 50 mM 2-mercaptoethanol.31
B-cell proliferation assay
For cell proliferation assays, the CellTiter 96 AQueous One Solution Cell Proliferation Assay system (Promega #G3852, WI, USA) was used according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Two hundred thousand cells were placed into each well in a 96-well plate and 10 µL per well of CellTiter 96 AQueous One Solution reagent were added. After incubation for 1 hour in humidified 5% CO2 atmosphere, ab-sorbance at 490 nm was measured.
Results
Arid5b regulates hematopoiesis in mouse
Because ARID5B variants are linked to susceptibility to BALL, we suggest that this gene is involved in normal hema-topoiesis, most likely B-lymphocyte development. To test this hypothesis, we generated a hematopoietic-specific Arid5b overexpression (Arid5bOE) mouse model (Online Supplementary Figure S1A), in which Arid5b upregulation can be induced with tetracycline and driven by the Vav1 promoter. Assessed at the transcript level, Arid5b was up-regulated 3-fold in bone marrow cells, 2-fold in the spleen, 3-fold in B220+ B cells, 2-fold in Mac1+/Gr1+ myeloid cells, and 4-fold in Ter119+ erythroid cells, when compared to the same populations sorted from wild-type littermates (Online Supplementary Figure S1B). Gross examination of Arid5bOE mice revealed no anatomical abnormalities. At 6-8 weeks of age, Arid5bOE mice had a decrease in bone marrow cellularity compared to wild-type mice, although this was not observed in the spleen (Online Supplementary Figure S5). Phenotypic characterization of their peripheral blood revealed a significant reduction in the number of circulating white blood cells (Figure 1A), primarily driven by a lower lymphocyte count in Arid5bOE mice (Figure 1B), with a modest reduction in the number of red blood cells (Figure 1C). There was also a significant decrease in the frequency of circulating B220+ cells, an increase in Mac1+ and Gr1+ cells, but no difference in CD3+ T cells in blood (Figure 1D). Both the frequency and the absolute number of B cells (mature and immature) were lower in both bone marrow (Figure 2A, Online Supplementary Figure S6A) and spleen (Figure 2B, Online Supplementary Figure S6E) of Arid5bOE mice when compared to wild-type littermates, whereas Arid5B overexpression had little effect on CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell homeostasis (Figure 2C, D; Online Supplementary Figure S6B, S6F). In line with this, immunohisto-chemistry staining demonstrated many fewer B220+ B cells in the bone marrow (Figure 3A) and spleen (Figure 3C) of Arid5bOE mice compared to wild-type littermates, but without obvious difference of CD3+ T cells in either bone marrow (Figure 3B) or spleen (Figure 3D).
By contrast, there was a slight increase in the frequency of myeloid cells in the bone marrow (Figure 4A) and spleen (Figure 4B) of Arid5bOE mice compared to the frequency in their wild-type littermates, although the absolute cell numbers were similar between mice of these two genotypes (Online Supplementary Figure S6C, G). In addition, we observed an increase in erythroblast progenitor frequency and absolute number in the spleens of Arid5bOE mice compared to wild-type littermates (Figure 4D; Online Supplementary Figure S6H), although this was not statistically significant in the bone marrow (Figure 4C; Online Supplementary Figure S6D). Analyzing hematopoietic stem and progenitor populations in the bone marrow, we noted a significant increase in the frequency and quantity of myeloid-biased multipotent progenitor 2 (MPP2) cells (Online Supplementary Figure S7A, B), with no difference observed in hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), MPP3, or MPP4 populations between Arid5b genotypes. An enhanced mye-loid colony-forming ability of bone marrow cells from Arid5bOE mice was observed when compared to that of wild-type littermates, mainly driven by increased granu-locyte and/or macrophage progenitor cells (granulocytes, macrophages, granulocyte-macrophage) and multi-potential progenitor cells (Online Supplementary Figure S7C).
Arid5b regulates B-cell development in bone marrow
B-cell lymphopoiesis from hematopoietic progenitors occurs in sequential stages in the bone marrow. To determine which stages were affected in Arid5bOE mice, B cells were analyzed using flow cytometry according to the Hardy fraction scheme.32 Quantification of the proportion and number of pre-pro-B cells (Fraction A), pro-B cells (Fraction B), small pre-B cells (Fraction D), immature B cells (Fraction E) and mature B cells (Fraction F) revealed a significant reduction in the frequency and quantity of these populations in the bone marrow of Arid5bOE mice compared to their wild-type littermates (Figure 5A, B). Interestingly, we found significant increases in apoptosis in both Fractions B and C in Arid5bOE mice (Figure 5C), but no change in the cycling profile of other B cells (Online Supplementary Figure S8). Testing the differentiation capacity of B-cell progenitors in vitro, we found that Arid5bOE bone marrow cells produced significantly fewer pre-B-cell colonies when compared to wild-type littermates in the presence of IL-7 (Figure 5D).
Effects of Arid5b deficiency on normal hematopoiesis were also analyzed in Mb1- and Vav1-driven Arid5b knockout mouse models (Arid5bKO) (Online Supplementary Figure S9). In contrast to the overexpression mouse model, the proportion of the pre-B-cell population (Fraction D) was significantly increased in the bone marrow of both Mb1-driven and Vav1-driven Arid5bKO mice compared to their wild-type littermates (Online Supplementary Figure S10A, D). By contrast, no significant changes were noted in hemato-poietic stem cells (HSCL T and HSCST), or progenitor cell populations (MPP2, MPP3, and MPP4), and myeloid cells in the bone marrow, spleen, and peripheral blood (Online Supplementary Figures S10B, C, E, F and S11).
Arid5b regulates B-cell development in secondary lymphoid organs
We extended our analysis of B lymphopoiesis to the spleen and peritoneal cavity. B-cell populations in the spleen were divided into four subsets: transitional type 1 B (T1) cells, transitional type 2 B (T2) cells, marginal zone B (MZ) cells, and follicular B (FO) cells. While the transitional and MZ B-cell subsets appeared to be unaffected by the over-expression of Arid5b, we found a significant reduction in the proportion and total number of follicular B cells relative to those in wild-type mice (Figure 6A, B). In the peritoneal cavity B cells, there was also a significant reduction in both B1a and B1b subsets in Arid5bOE mice (Figure 6C, D), but no difference in B2 B cells.
Arid5b influences B-cell activity and metabolism
To assess the role of Arid5b in B-cell activation, we purified CD43- resting splenic B cells to be stimulated with anti-IgM and IL-4 or LPS. We found that LPS induced proliferation in both wild-type and Arid5bOE B cells. Surprisingly, anti-IgM- and IL-4-induced proliferation was much less significant in B cells from Arid5bOE mice (Figure 7A), and these cells were also significantly more apoptotic 48 hours after stimulation (Figure 7B). Furthermore, the proliferation defect was consistent across a wide range of anti-IgM antibody concentrations (Figure 7C). Spleen B cells from Arid5bOE mice exhibited a significantly lower level of surface IgD, suggesting a partial maturation blockade at the IgD-negative stage (Figure 7D). In the presence of anti-IgM and IL-4, CD69 and CD86 were both upregulated but to a much lesser degree in Arid5bOE B cells than in B cells from wild-type litter-mates, 24 hours after stimulation (Figure 7E).
To further explore this, we examined B-cell receptor signaling in B cells with or without Arid5b overexpression using the same activation model mentioned above. Compared to cells from wild-type mice, Arid5bOE cells exhibited higher levels of pBTK and pSYK at baseline and these rose upon anti-IgM and IL-4 stimulation (Figure 8A, B). However, the degree of increase of these two phospho-proteins was significantly smaller with Arid5bOE, suggesting attenuated activation. Similarly, pAKT level was also higher at baseline in Arid5bOE cells with less activation by anti-IgM and IL-4 stimulation compared to that in wild-type cells (Figure 8C). Interestingly, there were also significantly higher levels of surface expression of VpreB and λ5 on CD19+ B cells from Arid5bOE mice than from wild-type mice (Figure 8D). Studies have shown that B cells undergo metabolic changes upon activation.33,34 These changes include increases in oxygen consumption rate (OCR) which is an indicator of oxidative phosphorylation. Our data suggest that at steady-state the B cells from Arid5bOE mice are more active than their wild-type B-cell counterparts. We found that naïve B cells isolated from Arid5bOE mice had increased OCR when compared to naïve B cells from wild-type littermates (Online Supplementary Figure S12A). Next, we wanted to gain more insight into the metabolism of B cells from Arid5bOE mice after stimulation with either LPS or anti-IgM and IL-4. We measured the OCR and found that the baseline OCR of Arid5bOE stimulated B cells was higher than that of wild-type mice and showed greater maximum mitochondrial respiration capacity (Online Supplementary Figure S12B). These results together suggested hyperactivation of B cells from Arid5bOE mice compared to their wild-type B-cell counterparts.
Discussion
The genomic region encompassing the ARID5B gene on 10q21.2 is one of the strongest genome-wide association study hits with robust association with ALL risk replicated consistently.9,10,13,35,36 Despite the overwhelming evidence for genetic association with this cancer, the molecular mechanisms by which ARID5B influences normal hematopoiesis have remained poorly understood.
Therefore, our study addressed this knowledge gap by developing mouse models to directly determine hemato-poietic consequences of ARID5B deregulation in vivo. Our results showed that overexpression of Arid5b in the mouse hematopoietic system results in marked disruption of B-cell development in vivo; B cells with Arid5B overexpression also exhibited defective activation in vitro in response to stimuli with abnormal mitochondria respiration.
Early studies of Arid5b null mice showed significant alteration in lymphoid development although systematic hematopoietic phenotyping was not performed,25 and these results were confounded by the mixed genetic background of these animals.26 In our model systems, Arid5b overexpression resulted in remarkable loss of B cells across different developmental stages. Even B cells that reached the terminally differentiated stage failed to be activated by anti-IgM and IL4 stimulation. These cells exhibited a higher propensity for apoptosis and attenuated expression of CD69 and CD86. They were characterized by hyperactive BTK and SYK at baseline compared to B cells from wild-type mice, and were then unresponsive to stimuli in vitro. The effects of ARID5B on B-cell development and function are of relevance not only because ALL primarily arises in B progenitor cells, but more importantly ARID5B has also been implicated by genome-wide association studies in a range of autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus.37,38 Particularly in lupus, aberrant B-cell activation and the production of pathogenic autoanti-bodies are hallmarks of this disease.39 The ALL risk allele at the ARID5B single nucleotide polymorphism was associated with lower transcription in-cis,40 linking ARID5B downregulation to leukemogenesis. Taken together, these results point to ARID5B as an important regulator of lym-phoid development, especially in the B-cell lineage.
In addition, we also explored the effects of Arid5b loss using both Mb1-driven and Vav1-driven knockout mouse models. Compared to wild-type littermates, these mice exhibited modest (but significant) increases of Hardy Fractions C and D within the B-cell compartment in the bone marrow of Mb1-driven Arid5bKO mice (Online Supplementary Figure S10A) or Hardy Fractions D and E in Vav1-driven Arid5bKO mice (Online Supplementary Figure S10D). However, we cannot definitively conclude whether the observed effects of Arid5b overexpression or knockout are completely cell autonomous, especially in the Vav1-driven models in which cells of multiple lineages can influence each other. Interestingly, our data suggest that Arid5b overexpression alters glucose metabolism with enhanced oxidative phosphorylation. Thus, one could speculate that the loss of ARID5B would result in decreased oxidative phosphorylation, which has been documented in B-ALL.41
It should be noted that none of our Arid5b mouse models developed overt B-ALL and therefore the direct link of ARID5B with leukemogenesis remains to be established.
It is plausible that Arid5b deregulation alone is insufficient to induce leukemia without co-operating mutations in other oncogenes or tumor suppressors, with only modest effects on leukemia development in vivo. Or ARID5B could only influence leukemogenesis when expressed at a precise level that is probably not recapitulated by ectopic overexpression or knockout in our models. Interestingly, Arid5bOE mice also survived for a shorter time compared to wild-type controls, with signs of hemolytic anemia (data not shown), and future studies are warranted to investigate these phenotypes. Nevertheless, alterations in B-cell differentiation and function in Arid5bOE and Arid5bKO mice pointed to the role of this gene in lineage development and relevance to B-ALL. Our comprehensive hematopoietic phenotyp-ing also helped paint a broad picture of ARID5B function, although the detailed molecular mechanisms remain incomplete.
In conclusion, we mechanistically explored the role of ARID5B in hematopoiesis. Our results provided novel insights into the biological functions of ARID5B in normal hematopoiesis, especially B-cell lymphopoiesis, further implicating this gene in B-cell-related diseases broadly.
Footnotes
- Received March 29, 2022
- Accepted July 29, 2022
Correspondence
Disclosures
JJY receives research funding from Takeda Pharmaceutical company. The other authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
Contributions
JJY is the principal investigator of this study, has full access to all the data in the study, and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. CG and XZ performed the experiments and analyzed the data. JJY, CG, and XZ wrote the manuscript. SMF and HZ contributed reagents, materials and/or data. JJY, XZ, CG, interpreted the data and the research findings. All the coauthors reviewed the manuscript.
Data-sharing statement
All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Online Supplementary Materials.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (CA176063), and by the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities (ALSAC). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Acknowledgments
We thank the patients and parents who participated in the clinical trials included in this study. We thank Dr. Omar I Abdel-Wahab for his advice on Arid5b mouse studies. We thank Keith A. Laycock, PhD, ELS, for scientific editing of the article.
References
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