| Literature DB >> 32251398 |
Sergio Martinez-Høyer1,2, Yu Deng1,3, Jeremy Parker1, Jihong Jiang1,3, Angela Mo1,3, T Roderick Docking1, Nadia Gharaee1,3, Jenny Li1, Patricia Umlandt1, Megan Fuller1, Martin Jädersten4, Austin Kulasekararaj5, Luca Malcovati6, Alan F List7, Eva Hellström-Lindberg4, Uwe Platzbecker8, Aly Karsan9,10.
Abstract
Interstitial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 5 (del(5q)) is the most common structural genomic variant in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)1. Lenalidomide (LEN) is the treatment of choice for patients with del(5q) MDS, but half of the responding patients become resistant2 within 2 years. TP53 mutations are detected in ~20% of LEN-resistant patients3. Here we show that patients who become resistant to LEN harbour recurrent variants of TP53 or RUNX1. LEN upregulated RUNX1 protein and function in a CRBN- and TP53-dependent manner in del(5q) cells, and mutation or downregulation of RUNX1 rendered cells resistant to LEN. LEN induced megakaryocytic differentiation of del(5q) cells followed by cell death that was dependent on calpain activation and CSNK1A1 degradation4,5. We also identified GATA2 as a LEN-responsive gene that is required for LEN-induced megakaryocyte differentiation. Megakaryocytic gene-promoter analyses suggested that LEN-induced degradation of IKZF1 enables a RUNX1-GATA2 complex to drive megakaryocytic differentiation. Overexpression of GATA2 restored LEN sensitivity in the context of RUNX1 or TP53 mutations by enhancing LEN-induced megakaryocytic differentiation. Screening for mutations that block LEN-induced megakaryocytic differentiation should identify patients who are resistant to LEN.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32251398 DOI: 10.1038/s41556-020-0497-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824