4.7 Article

A KDM4A-PAF1-mediated epigenomic network is essential for acute myeloid leukemia cell self-renewal and survival

Journal

CELL DEATH & DISEASE
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-021-03738-0

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [105614/Z/14/Z]
  2. Leuka [2016/JGF/0005]
  3. Howat Foundation
  4. Friends of Paul O'Gorman
  5. MRC CiC [18048]
  6. Tenovus Scotland [S1913]
  7. Medical Research Council (MRC), UK DTP Ph.D. studentship [1732424]
  8. Carnegie Trust [PHD007721]
  9. Chief Scientific Officer (CSO) [CGA/19/63]
  10. SULSA-PECRE
  11. Adam Renwick Martin-Friends of Paul O'Gorman Ph.D. Studentship

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This study highlights the essential role of KDM4A in acute myeloid leukemia, showing that its loss can induce apoptosis in AML cells. KDM4A controls the epigenomic network essential for AML self-renewal and survival, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic target.
Epigenomic dysregulation is a common pathological feature in human hematological malignancies. H3K9me3 emerges as an important epigenomic marker in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Its associated methyltransferases, such as SETDB1, suppress AML leukemogenesis, whilst H3K9me3 demethylases KDM4C is required for mixed-lineage leukemia rearranged AML. However, the specific role and molecular mechanism of action of another member of the KDM4 family, KDM4A has not previously been clearly defined. In this study, we delineated and functionally validated the epigenomic network regulated by KDM4A. We show that selective loss of KDM4A is sufficient to induce apoptosis in a broad spectrum of human AML cells. This detrimental phenotype results from a global accumulation of H3K9me3 and H3K27me3 at KDM4A targeted genomic loci thereby causing downregulation of a KDM4A-PAF1 controlled transcriptional program essential for leukemogenesis, distinct from that of KDM4C. From this regulatory network, we further extracted a KDM4A-9 gene signature enriched with leukemia stem cell activity; the KDM4A-9 score alone or in combination with the known LSC17 score, effectively stratifies high-risk AML patients. Together, these results establish the essential and unique role of KDM4A for AML self-renewal and survival, supporting further investigation of KDM4A and its targets as a potential therapeutic vulnerability in AML.

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