par Vallois, David;Missiaglia, Edoardo;Veloza, Luis;Fischer, Anja;Cavalieri, Doriane;Rattina, Vimel;Bisig, Bettina;Roh, Vincent;Wiehle, Laura;Sarkis, Rita;Bachy, Emmanuel;Bonnet, Christophe;Bruneau, Julie;Cairoli, Anne;De Wind, Roland;Drieux, Fanny;Dubois, Romain;Emile, Jean-François;Fataccioli, Virginie;Laribi, Kamel;Ledoux-Pilon, Albane;Lemonnier, François;Llamas-Gutierrez, Francisco;Morel, Pierre
;Parrens, Marie;Poullot, Elsa;Quintanilla-Martinez, Leticia;Sandrini, Jeremy;Somja, Joan;Xerri, Luc;Tournilhac, Olivier;Gaulard, Philippe;Siebert, Reiner;de Leval, Laurence
Référence Leukemia, 40, 1, page (252-259)
Publication Publié, 2026-01
;Parrens, Marie;Poullot, Elsa;Quintanilla-Martinez, Leticia;Sandrini, Jeremy;Somja, Joan;Xerri, Luc;Tournilhac, Olivier;Gaulard, Philippe;Siebert, Reiner;de Leval, LaurenceRéférence Leukemia, 40, 1, page (252-259)
Publication Publié, 2026-01
Article révisé par les pairs
| Résumé : | Enteropathy-associated intestinal T-cell lymphoma (EATL) and monomorphic epitheliotropic intestinal T-cell lymphoma (MEITL) have distinctive clinical context, morphology, and immunophenotype. To characterize their genetic and molecular specificities, we compared 30 EATLs and 52 MEITLs by whole-exome, RNA and miRNA sequencing and DNA methylation profiling. Highly recurrent SETD2 loss-of-function alterations and frequent mutations of H3-3A/B consistently altering H3R2, implying deregulation of histone marks, were selectively found in MEITL. EATL instead harbored frequent mutations in TET2, ARID1A, and KMT2D. Highly prevalent JAK-STAT pathway mutations preferentially affected JAK3 and STAT5B in MEITL, and JAK1 and STAT3 in EATL. Half of EATLs contained disruptive mutations in HLA class I genes, impacting class I molecule expression. EATL containing more abundant macrophages was enriched in inflammatory response signatures, with upregulation of CD274, CXCL13, and IDO1 transcripts, suggesting an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. CpGs hypomethylated in MEITL compared to EATL were enriched in promoter regions. Unsupervised analyses of mutations, transcription, and methylation profiles concordantly segregated EATLs from MEITLs. In summary, the distinctive genetic, epigenetic, and expression footprints of EATL and MEITL established by this study expand disease-defining features, have diagnostic implications, and provide a rationale for targeted therapies. |



