AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists found that a protein called ANP32B helps control another important protein called p53, which keeps blood-forming stem cells healthy.
  • When they removed ANP32B from these cells, it made it harder for the stem cells to recover after being hurt.
  • They also discovered that ANP32B is often high in cancer cells from patients with a type of leukemia, and by targeting ANP32B, it could help improve treatments for this cancer.

Article Abstract

Proper regulation of p53 signaling is critical for the maintenance of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and leukemic stem cells (LSCs). The hematopoietic cell-specific mechanisms regulating p53 activity remain largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that conditional deletion of acidic leucine-rich nuclear phosphoprotein 32B (ANP32B) in hematopoietic cells impairs repopulation capacity and postinjury regeneration of HSCs. Mechanistically, ANP32B forms a repressive complex with p53 and thus inhibits the transcriptional activity of p53 in hematopoietic cells, and p53 deletion rescues the functional defect in Anp32b-deficient HSCs. Of great interest, ANP32B is highly expressed in leukemic cells from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Anp32b deletion enhances p53 transcriptional activity to impair LSC function in a murine CML model and exhibits synergistic therapeutic effects with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in inhibiting CML propagation. In summary, our findings provide a novel strategy to enhance p53 activity in LSCs by inhibiting ANP32B and identify ANP32B as a potential therapeutic target in treating CML.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8678996PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.2020010400DOI Listing

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