| Literature DB >> 33673123 |
Franziska Liss1, Miriam Frech2, Ying Wang2, Gavin Giel2, Sabrina Fischer1, Clara Simon1, Lisa Marie Weber1, Andrea Nist3, Thorsten Stiewe3, Andreas Neubauer2, Andreas Burchert2, Robert Liefke1,2.
Abstract
Personalized treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) that target individual aberrations strongly improved the survival of AML patients. However, AML is still one of the most lethal cancer diseases of the 21st century, demonstrating the need to find novel drug targets and to explore alternative treatment strategies. Upon investigation of public perturbation data, we identified the transcription factor IRF8 as a novel AML-specific susceptibility gene in humans. IRF8 is upregulated in a subset of AML cells and its deletion leads to impaired proliferation in those cells. Consistently, high IRF8 expression is associated with poorer patients' prognoses. Combining gene expression changes upon IRF8 deletion and the genome-wide localization of IRF8 in the AML cell line MV4-11, we demonstrate that IRF8 directly regulates key signaling molecules, such as the kinases SRC and FAK, the transcription factors RUNX1 and IRF5, and the cell cycle regulator Cyclin D1. IRF8 loss impairs AML-driving signaling pathways, including the WNT, Chemokine, and VEGF signaling pathways. Additionally, many members of the focal adhesion pathway showed reduced expression, providing a putative link between high IRF8 expression and poor prognosis. Thus, this study suggests that IRF8 could serve as a biomarker and potential molecular target in a subset of human AMLs.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; ChIP-Seq; IRF8; acute myeloid leukemia; proliferation; signaling; transcription
Year: 2021 PMID: 33673123 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13040764
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639