4.6 Article

MAT2A as Key Regulator and Therapeutic Target in MLLr Leukemogenesis

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers12051342

Keywords

MLL-rearranged leukemia; MAT2A; CRISPR; Cas9; pharmacological study

Categories

Funding

  1. Junior Research Group Grant of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical Research (IZKF) [2383-0-0, 2386-0-0]
  2. Wuerttembergischer Krebspreis
  3. Clinician Scientist Program of the Faculty of Medicine Tuebingen [390-0-0]
  4. Max Eder Junior Research Group Grant from the Deutsche Krebshilfe [70112548]
  5. Clinician Scientist Program of the Faculty of Medicine Tuebingen
  6. Margarete-von-Wrangell fellowship through the Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts Baden-Wuerttemberg
  7. decipherPD transnational consortium on Epigenomics of Complex Diseases (BMBF) [01KU1503]

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Epigenetic dysregulation plays a pivotal role in mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) pathogenesis, therefore serving as a suitable therapeutic target. S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) is the universal methyl donor in human cells and is synthesized by methionine adenosyltransferase 2A (MAT2A), which is deregulated in different cancer types. Here, we used our human CRISPR/Cas9-MLL-rearranged (CRISPR/Cas9-MLLr) leukemia model, faithfully mimicking MLLr patients' pathology with indefinite growth potential in vitro, to evaluate the unknown role of MAT2A. Comparable to publicly available patient data, we detected MAT2A to be significantly overexpressed in our CRISPR/Cas9-MLLr model compared to healthy controls. By using non-MLLr and MLLr cell lines and our model, we detected an MLLr-specific enhanced response to PF-9366, a new MAT2A inhibitor, and small interfering (si) RNA-mediated knockdown of MAT2A, by alteration of the proliferation, viability, differentiation, apoptosis, cell cycling, and histone methylation. Moreover, the combinational treatment of PF-9366 with chemotherapy or targeted therapies against the SAM-dependent methyltransferases, disruptor of telomeric silencing 1 like (DOT1L) and protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5), revealed even more pronounced effects. In summary, we uncovered MAT2A as a key regulator in MLL leukemogenesis and its inhibition led to significant anti-leukemic effects. Therefore, our study paves the avenue for clinical application of PF-9366 to improve the treatment of poor prognosis MLLr leukemia.

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