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Publication : Transcriptional memory of cells of origin overrides β-catenin requirement of MLL cancer stem cells.

First Author  Siriboonpiputtana T Year  2017
Journal  EMBO J Volume  36
Issue  21 Pages  3139-3155
PubMed ID  28978671 Mgi Jnum  J:248920
Mgi Id  MGI:6094645 Doi  10.15252/embj.201797994
Citation  Siriboonpiputtana T, et al. (2017) Transcriptional memory of cells of origin overrides beta-catenin requirement of MLL cancer stem cells. EMBO J 36(21):3139-3155
abstractText  While beta-catenin has been demonstrated as an essential molecule and therapeutic target for various cancer stem cells (CSCs) including those driven by MLL fusions, here we show that transcriptional memory from cells of origin predicts AML patient survival and allows beta-catenin-independent transformation in MLL-CSCs derived from hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)-enriched LSK population but not myeloid-granulocyte progenitors. Mechanistically, beta-catenin regulates expression of downstream targets of a key transcriptional memory gene, Hoxa9 that is highly enriched in LSK-derived MLL-CSCs and helps sustain leukemic self-renewal. Suppression of Hoxa9 sensitizes LSK-derived MLL-CSCs to beta-catenin inhibition resulting in abolishment of CSC transcriptional program and transformation ability. In addition, further molecular and functional analyses identified Prmt1 as a key common downstream mediator for beta-catenin/Hoxa9 functions in LSK-derived MLL-CSCs. Together, these findings not only uncover an unexpectedly important role of cells of origin transcriptional memory in regulating CSC self-renewal, but also reveal a novel molecular network mediated by beta-catenin/Hoxa9/Prmt1 in governing leukemic self-renewal.
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