4.7 Article

KDM6 demethylases integrate DNA repair gene regulation and loss of KDM6A sensitizes human acute myeloid leukemia to PARP and BCL2 inhibition

Journal

LEUKEMIA
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 751-764

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-023-01833-z

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Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous and aggressive malignancy with limited targeted therapies. This study found that KDM6-demethylase function critically regulates DNA-damage-repair-(DDR) gene expression in AML. KDM6A loss-of-function mutations are linked to chemoresistance, while upregulated KDM6A is associated with venetoclax tolerance. Combination therapy targeting PARP and BCL2 was shown to be superior in inducing AML apoptosis, particularly in AML cells carrying KDM6A-domain mutations. Therefore, KDM6A could be a potential molecular regulator for determining therapeutic efficacy in AML.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous, aggressive malignancy with dismal prognosis and with limited availability of targeted therapies. Epigenetic deregulation contributes to AML pathogenesis. KDM6 proteins are histone-3-lysine-27-demethylases that play context-dependent roles in AML. We inform that KDM6-demethylase function critically regulates DNA-damage-repair-(DDR) gene expression in AML. Mechanistically, KDM6 expression is regulated by genotoxic stress, with deficiency of KDM6A-(UTX) and KDM6B-(JMJD3) impairing DDR transcriptional activation and compromising repair potential. Acquired KDM6A loss-of-function mutations are implicated in chemoresistance, although a significant percentage of relapsed-AML has upregulated KDM6A. Olaparib treatment reduced engraftment of KDM6A-mutant-AML-patient-derived xenografts, highlighting synthetic lethality using Poly-(ADP-ribose)-polymerase-(PARP)-inhibition. Crucially, a higher KDM6A expression is correlated with venetoclax tolerance. Loss of KDM6A increased mitochondrial activity, BCL2 expression, and sensitized AML cells to venetoclax. Additionally, BCL2A1 associates with venetoclax resistance, and KDM6A loss was accompanied with a downregulated BCL2A1. Corroborating these results, dual targeting of PARP and BCL2 was superior to PARP or BCL2 inhibitor monotherapy in inducing AML apoptosis, and primary AML cells carrying KDM6A-domain mutations were even more sensitive to the combination. Together, our study illustrates a mechanistic rationale in support of a novel combination therapy for AML based on subtype-heterogeneity, and establishes KDM6A as a molecular regulator for determining therapeutic efficacy.

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