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Publication : Nuclear interacting SET domain protein 1 inactivation impairs GATA1-regulated erythroid differentiation and causes erythroleukemia.

First Author  Leonards K Year  2020
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  11
Issue  1 Pages  2807
PubMed ID  32533074 Mgi Jnum  J:293844
Mgi Id  MGI:6447976 Doi  10.1038/s41467-020-16179-8
Citation  Leonards K, et al. (2020) Nuclear interacting SET domain protein 1 inactivation impairs GATA1-regulated erythroid differentiation and causes erythroleukemia. Nat Commun 11(1):2807
abstractText  The nuclear receptor binding SET domain protein 1 (NSD1) is recurrently mutated in human cancers including acute leukemia. We show that NSD1 knockdown alters erythroid clonogenic growth of human CD34(+) hematopoietic cells. Ablation of Nsd1 in the hematopoietic system of mice induces a transplantable erythroleukemia. In vitro differentiation of Nsd1(-/-) erythroblasts is majorly impaired despite abundant expression of GATA1, the transcriptional master regulator of erythropoiesis, and associated with an impaired activation of GATA1-induced targets. Retroviral expression of wildtype NSD1, but not a catalytically-inactive NSD1(N1918Q) SET-domain mutant induces terminal maturation of Nsd1(-/-) erythroblasts. Despite similar GATA1 protein levels, exogenous NSD1 but not NSD(N1918Q) significantly increases the occupancy of GATA1 at target genes and their expression. Notably, exogenous NSD1 reduces the association of GATA1 with the co-repressor SKI, and knockdown of SKI induces differentiation of Nsd1(-/-) erythroblasts. Collectively, we identify the NSD1 methyltransferase as a regulator of GATA1-controlled erythroid differentiation and leukemogenesis.
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