| Literature DB >> 33322186 |
Sophie Kellaway1, Paulynn S Chin1, Farnaz Barneh2, Constanze Bonifer1, Olaf Heidenreich2.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogenous disease with multiple sub-types which are defined by different somatic mutations that cause blood cell differentiation to go astray. Mutations occur in genes encoding members of the cellular machinery controlling transcription and chromatin structure, including transcription factors, chromatin modifiers, DNA-methyltransferases, but also signaling molecules that activate inducible transcription factors controlling gene expression and cell growth. Mutant cells in AML patients are unable to differentiate and adopt new identities that are shaped by the original driver mutation and by rewiring their gene regulatory networks into regulatory phenotypes with enhanced fitness. One of the best-studied AML-subtypes is the t(8;21) AML which carries a translocation fusing the DNA-binding domain of the hematopoietic master regulator RUNX1 to the ETO gene. The resulting oncoprotein, RUNX1/ETO has been studied for decades, both at the biochemical but also at the systems biology level. It functions as a dominant-negative version of RUNX1 and interferes with multiple cellular processes associated with myeloid differentiation, growth regulation and genome stability. In this review, we summarize our current knowledge of how this protein reprograms normal into malignant cells and how our current knowledge could be harnessed to treat the disease.Entities:
Keywords: 21); RUNX1/ETO; acute myeloid leukemia; chromatin; epigenetic reprogramming; gene regulatory networks; personalized medicine; t(8
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33322186 PMCID: PMC7763303 DOI: 10.3390/cells9122681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600