| Literature DB >> 35108652 |
Caiqing Hao1, Xianyu Shao2, Juan Song3, Mengyuan Peng3, Yimin Lao3, Ryan Mack4, Lei Zhang5, Wei Wei4, Na Liu6, Tian Wang2, Yuanyuan Wu2, Lanyao Feng2, Lijun Yin2, Shouxin Wang2, Xiaojian Sun6, Saijuan Chen7, Jiwang Zhang8, Bing Li9.
Abstract
Both MLL-AF9 and MLL-ENL leukemia fusion proteins drive oncogenic transformation of hematopoietic cells through their N-terminal DNA/histone binding mixed-lineage leukemia 1 domain and C-terminal fragment of AF9 or ENL containing an unstructured linker region and the ANC1 homology domain, which recruits transcription factors. Despite of their structural similarity, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients bearing MLL-ENL show more adverse outcomes compared to those with MLL-AF9. We recapitulated the clinical patterns of these two MLL-fusions driven AMLs using murine models and found that MLL-ENL AML cells showed slower cell cycle progression and more resistance to standard chemotherapy than MLL-AF9 cells. These phenotypes were primarily controlled by the linker regions of ENL and a highly conserved lysine residue K469 within. Substitution of K469 with an acetylated mimic glutamine abolished the ability of MLL-ENL to suppress proliferation and promote chemo-resistance. We showed that deacetylase Sirt2 might act as an upstream regulator of MLL-ENL. Deletion of Sirt2 promoted proliferation of AML cells with either MLL fusions. Importantly, loss of Sirt2 greatly enhanced the sensitivity of the MLL-ENL AML cells to chemo-treatment. Taken together, our study uncovered a unique regulatory role of Sirt2 in leukemogenesis and suggested targeting SIRT2 as a new way to sensitize MLL-ENL AML patience for chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: AML; Chemotherapy; MLL-ENL; Proliferation; SIRT2
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35108652 PMCID: PMC9052174 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.01.081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.322