| Literature DB >> 30799057 |
Eric Wang1, Sydney X Lu2, Alessandro Pastore2, Xufeng Chen1, Jochen Imig1, Stanley Chun-Wei Lee2, Kathryn Hockemeyer1, Yohana E Ghebrechristos1, Akihide Yoshimi2, Daichi Inoue2, Michelle Ki2, Hana Cho2, Lillian Bitner2, Andreas Kloetgen1, Kuan-Ting Lin3, Taisuke Uehara4, Takashi Owa4, Raoul Tibes1, Adrian R Krainer3, Omar Abdel-Wahab5, Iannis Aifantis6.
Abstract
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are essential modulators of transcription and translation frequently dysregulated in cancer. We systematically interrogated RBP dependencies in human cancers using a comprehensive CRISPR/Cas9 domain-focused screen targeting RNA-binding domains of 490 classical RBPs. This uncovered a network of physically interacting RBPs upregulated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and crucial for maintaining RNA splicing and AML survival. Genetic or pharmacologic targeting of one key member of this network, RBM39, repressed cassette exon inclusion and promoted intron retention within mRNAs encoding HOXA9 targets as well as in other RBPs preferentially required in AML. The effects of RBM39 loss on splicing further resulted in preferential lethality of spliceosomal mutant AML, providing a strategy for treatment of AML bearing RBP splicing mutations.Entities:
Keywords: AML; CRISPR; DCAF15; RBM39; RNA-binding proteins; alternative splicing; leukemia; spliceosome; sulfonamides
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30799057 PMCID: PMC6424627 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2019.01.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743