T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematological malignancy arising from the neoplastic transformation of immature T cells during their development in the thymus. Deciphering the developmental programs whose dysregulation drives T-ALL pathogenesis is critical for the development of novel targeted therapies, which remain an urgent unmet need for the treatment of this disease. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as key post-transcriptional regulators of numerous physiological processes including cancer. However, the specific role of miRNAs in human T-cell development and T-ALL pathogenesis remains largely unexplored. In this study, we comprehensively evaluated miRNA expression profiles across human T-cell development using microarray analysis and identified a dynamic expression pattern of miR-16-2, which is upregulated during early pre-T cell proliferative stages up to the resting stage of immature thymocytes immediately preceding TCRab expression, and is subsequently downregulated. We also confirmed the coordinated regulation of miR-15b expression, consistent with the reported clustered genomic location of both miRNAs. Notably, functional studies identified the miR-15b/16-2 cluster as a negative regulator of early thymocyte proliferation and demonstrated that overexpression of miR-15b/16-2 in T-ALL cells impaired leukemic growth in vitro and tumor progression in patient-derived xenotransplantation assays. Mechanistically, miR-15b/16-2 represses the expression of the genes encoding BCL-2 and CYCLIN D3, thereby promoting apoptosis and cell cycle dysregulation in T-ALL cells, characterized by an accumulation of G0-phase cells and a defective transition to the G2/M phase. Overall, these findings support a novel tumor-suppressive function for miR-15b/16-2 in T-ALL and highlight its potential as a promising therapeutic target.
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Marı́a L. Toribio
María J García-León
Marina García-Peydró
Blood
The Ohio State University
University of Utah
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
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Toribio et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8958f6c1944d70ce069db — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2025030670