AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study highlights that NPM1 haploinsufficiency (having one functional copy of the NPM1 gene) in conjunction with MEIS1 overexpression can trigger AML in mice, mimicking human NPM1c AML.
  • * Findings suggest that NPM1 haploinsufficiency influences MEIS1 binding to the SMC4 oncogene, indicating that targeting the MEIS1-SMC4 relationship could be a potential treatment strategy for this AML subtype.

Article Abstract

NPM1 is among the most frequently mutated genes in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Mutations in the NPM1 gene result in the increased export of NPM1 to the cytoplasm (NPM1c) and are associated with multiple transforming events including the aberrant upregulation of MEIS1 that maintains stem cell and cell cycle-associated pathways in NPM1c AML. However, another consequence of the NPM1c mutation is the inadequate levels of NPM1 wild-type in the nucleus and nucleolus, caused by the loss of one wild-type allele in addition to enforced NPM1 nuclear export. The contribution of NPM1 haploinsufficiency independently of the NPM1 mutation to AML development and its relationship with MEIS1 function is poorly understood. Using mouse models, our study shows that NPM1 haploinsufficiency paired with MEIS1 overexpression is sufficient to induce a fully penetrant AML in mice that transcriptionally resembles human NPM1c AML. NPM1 haploinsufficiency alters MEIS1-binding occupancies such that it binds the promoter of the oncogene structural maintenance of chromosome protein 4 (SMC4) in NPM1 haploinsufficient AML cells but not in NPM1 wild-type-harboring Hoxa9/Meis1-transformed cells. SMC4 is higher expressed in haploinsufficient and NPM1c+ AML cells, which are more vulnerable to the disruption of the MEIS1-SMC4 axis compared with AML cells with nonmutated NPM1. Taken together, our study underlines that NPM1 haploinsufficiency on its own is a key factor of myeloid leukemogenesis and characterizes the MEIS1-SMC4 axis as a potential therapeutic target in this AML subtype.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9898611PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2022007015DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study highlights that NPM1 haploinsufficiency (having one functional copy of the NPM1 gene) in conjunction with MEIS1 overexpression can trigger AML in mice, mimicking human NPM1c AML.
  • * Findings suggest that NPM1 haploinsufficiency influences MEIS1 binding to the SMC4 oncogene, indicating that targeting the MEIS1-SMC4 relationship could be a potential treatment strategy for this AML subtype.
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