| Literature DB >> 32556243 |
Simon Raffel1,2,3,4, Daniel Klimmeck1,2,3, Mattia Falcone1,2,3, Aykut Demir4, Alireza Pouya4, Petra Zeisberger1,2,3, Christoph Lutz5, Marco Tinelli6, Oliver Bischel7, Lars Bullinger8,9, Christian Thiede10, Anne Flörcken9, Jörg Westermann9, Gerhard Ehninger10, Anthony D Ho4, Carsten Müller-Tidow4, Zuguang Gu11, Carl Herrmann12,13, Jeroen Krijgsveld14,15,16, Andreas Trumpp1,2,3,17, Jenny Hansson14,18.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia is characterized by the accumulation of clonal myeloid blast cells unable to differentiate into mature leukocytes. Chemotherapy induces remission in the majority of patients, but relapse rates are high and lead to poor clinical outcomes. Because this is primarily caused by chemotherapy-resistant leukemic stem cells (LSCs), it is essential to eradicate LSCs to improve patient survival. LSCs have predominantly been studied at the transcript level, thus information about posttranscriptionally regulated genes and associated networks is lacking. Here, we extend our previous report on LSC proteomes to healthy age-matched hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) and correlate the proteomes to the corresponding transcriptomes. By comparing LSCs to leukemic blasts and healthy HSPCs, we validate candidate LSC markers and highlight novel and potentially targetable proteins that are absent or only lowly expressed in HSPCs. In addition, our data provide strong evidence that LSCs harbor a characteristic energy metabolism, adhesion molecule composition, as well as RNA-processing properties. Furthermore, correlating proteome and transcript data of the same individual samples highlights the strength of proteome analyses, which are particularly potent in detecting alterations in metabolic pathways. In summary, our study provides a comprehensive proteomic and transcriptomic characterization of functionally validated LSCs, blasts, and healthy HSPCs, representing a valuable resource helping to design LSC-directed therapies.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32556243 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019003654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113