SETD2 mutations confer chemoresistance in acute myeloid leukemia partly through altered cell cycle checkpoints

SETD2 , an epigenetic tumor suppressor, is frequently mutated in MLL-rearranged (MLLr) leukemia and relapsed acute leukemia (AL). To clarify the impact of SETD2 mutations on chemotherapy sensitivity in MLLr leukemia, two loss-of-function (LOF) Setd2-mutant alleles ( Setd2 F2478L/WT or Setd2 Ex6-KO/W...

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Veröffentlicht in:Leukemia 2019-11, Vol.33 (11), p.2585-2598
Hauptverfasser: Dong, Yunzhu, Zhao, Xinghui, Feng, Xiaomin, Zhou, Yile, Yan, Xiaomei, Zhang, Ya, Bu, Jiachen, Zhan, Di, Hayashi, Yoshihiro, Zhang, Yue, Xu, Zefeng, Huang, Rui, Wang, Jieyu, Zhao, Taoran, Xiao, Zhijian, Ju, Zhenyu, Andreassen, Paul R., Wang, Qian-fei, Chen, Wei, Huang, Gang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SETD2 , an epigenetic tumor suppressor, is frequently mutated in MLL-rearranged (MLLr) leukemia and relapsed acute leukemia (AL). To clarify the impact of SETD2 mutations on chemotherapy sensitivity in MLLr leukemia, two loss-of-function (LOF) Setd2-mutant alleles ( Setd2 F2478L/WT or Setd2 Ex6-KO/WT ) were generated and introduced, respectively, to the Mll-Af9 knock-in leukemia mouse model. Both alleles cooperated with Mll-Af9 to accelerate leukemia development that resulted in resistance to standard Cytarabine-based chemotherapy. Mechanistically, Setd2-mutant leukemic cells showed downregulated signaling related to cell cycle progression, S, and G2/M checkpoint regulation. Thus, after Cytarabine treatment, Setd2-mutant leukemic cells exit from the S phase and progress to the G2/M phase. Importantly, S and G2/M cell cycle checkpoint inhibition could resensitize the Mll-Af9/Setd2 double-mutant cells to standard chemotherapy by causing DNA replication collapse, mitotic catastrophe, and increased cell death. These findings demonstrate that LOF SETD2 mutations confer chemoresistance on AL to DNA-damaging treatment by S and G2/M checkpoint defects. The combination of S and G2/M checkpoint inhibition with chemotherapy can be explored as a promising therapeutic strategy by exploiting their unique vulnerability and resensitizing chemoresistant AL with SETD2 or SETD2 -like epigenetic mutations.
ISSN:0887-6924
1476-5551
DOI:10.1038/s41375-019-0456-2