4.8 Article

Oncogenic RAS promotes leukemic transformation of CUX1-deficient cells

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 42, Issue 12, Pages 881-893

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-023-02612-x

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-7/del(7q) is commonly found in myeloid neoplasms. CUX1, located on 7q22, is a transcription factor associated with poor prognosis when mutated. CUX1 deficiency and oncogenic RAS mutations are found to be linked and promote leukemogenesis. This research indicates a potential therapy for malignancies with CUX1 inactivation.
-7/del(7q) is prevalent across subtypes of myeloid neoplasms. CUX1, located on 7q22, encodes a homeodomain-containing transcription factor, and, like -7/del(7q), CUX1 inactivating mutations independently carry a poor prognosis. As with loss of 7q, CUX1 mutations often occur early in disease pathogenesis. We reported that CUX1 deficiency causes myelodysplastic syndrome in mice but was insufficient to drive acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Given the known association between -7/del(7q) and RAS pathway mutations, we mined cancer genome databases and explicitly linked CUX1 mutations with oncogenic RAS mutations. To determine if activated RAS and CUX1 deficiency promote leukemogenesis, we generated mice bearing Nras(G12D) and CUX1-knockdown which developed AML, not seen in mice with either mutation alone. Oncogenic RAS imparts increased self-renewal on CUX1-deficient hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs). Reciprocally, CUX1 knockdown amplifies RAS signaling through reduction of negative regulators of RAS/PI3K signaling. Double mutant HSPCs were responsive to PIK3 or MEK inhibition. Similarly, low expression of CUX1 in primary AML samples correlates with sensitivity to the same inhibitors, suggesting a potential therapy for malignancies with CUX1 inactivation. This work demonstrates an unexpected convergence of an oncogene and tumor suppressor gene on the same pathway.

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