AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the transformation of chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) to leukemia, highlighting TP53 mutations as a crucial factor, though their proliferation advantage requires a selection process.
  • MDM2 inhibitors, which can protect normal p53 from degradation, show potential in treating TP53-mutated cells, but their effects in this context are not well-studied until now.
  • The research reveals that TP53 mutations typically occur late in MPN development, predominantly within the driver clone, and it introduces an in vitro test that can predict the emergence of TP53-mutated cells in response to MDM2 inhibitors.

Article Abstract

The mechanisms of transformation of chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) to leukemia are largely unknown, but TP53 mutations acquisition is considered a key event in this process. p53 is a main tumor suppressor, but mutations in this protein per se do not confer a proliferative advantage to the cells, and a selection process is needed for the expansion of mutant clones. MDM2 inhibitors may rescue normal p53 from degradation and have been evaluated in a variety of cancers with promising results. However, the impact of these drugs on TP53-mutated cells is underexplored. We report herein evidence of a direct effect of MDM2 inhibition on the selection of MPN patients' cells harboring TP53 mutations. To decipher whether these mutations can arise in a specific molecular context, we used a DNA single-cell approach to determine the clonal architecture of TP53-mutated cells. We observed that TP53 mutations are late events in MPN, mainly occurring in the driver clone, whereas clonal evolution frequently consists of sequential branching instead of linear consecutive acquisition of mutations in the same clone. At the single-cell level, the presence of additional mutations does not influence the selection of TP53 mutant cells by MDM2 inhibitor treatment. Also, we describe an in vitro test allowing to predict the emergence of TP53 mutated clones. Altogether, this is the first demonstration that a drug treatment can directly favor the emergence of TP53-mutated subclones in MPN.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9092407PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005867DOI Listing

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