Journal
LEUKEMIA
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 501-509Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/leu.2008.326
Keywords
nucleophosmin; NPM1; mutations; p14(ARF); acute myeloid leukaemia; nuclear export signal
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Funding
- Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro
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In acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), nucleophosmin-1 (NPM1) mutations create a nuclear export signal (NES) motif and disrupt tryptophans at NPM1 C-terminus, leading to nucleophosmin accumulation in leukaemic cell cytoplasm. We investigated how nucleophosmin NES motifs ( two physiological and one created by the mutation) regulate traffic and interaction of mutated NPM1, NPM1wt and p14(ARF). Nucleophosmin export into cytoplasm was maximum when the protein contained all three NES motifs, as naturally occurs in NPM1-mutated AML. The two physiological NES motifs mediated NPM1 homo/heterodimerization, influencing subcellular distribution of NPM1wt, mutated NPM1 and p14(ARF) in a 'dose-dependent tug of war' fashion. In transfected cells, excess doses of mutant NPM1 relocated completely NPM1wt (and p14(ARF)) from the nucleoli to the cytoplasm. This distribution pattern was also observed in a proportion of NPM1-mutated AML patients. In transfected cells, excess of NPM1wt (and p14(ARF)) relocated NPM1 mutant from the cytoplasm to the nucleoli. Notably, this distribution pattern was not observed in AML patients where the mutant was consistently cytoplasmic restricted. These findings reinforce the concept that NPM1 mutants are naturally selected for most efficient cytoplasmic export, pointing to this event as critical for leukaemogenesis. Moreover, they provide a rationale basis for designing small molecules acting at the interface between mutated NPM1 and other interacting proteins.
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