Combined gene expression and DNA occupancy profiling identifies potential therapeutic targets of t(8;21) AML

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Abstract

Chromosome translocation 8q22;21q22 [t(8;21)] is commonly associated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and the resulting AML1-ETO fusion proteins are involved in the pathogenesis of AML. To identify novel molecular and therapeutic targets, we performed combined gene expression microarray and promoter occupancy (ChIP-chip) profiling using Lin-/ Sca1-/cKit+ cells, the major leukemia cell population, from an AML mouse model induced by AML1-ETO9a (AE9a). Approximately 30% of the identified common targets of microarray and ChIP-chip assays overlap with the human t(8;21)-gene expression molecular signature. CD45, a protein tyrosine phosphatase and a negative regulator of cytokine/growth factor receptor and JAK/STAT signaling, is among those targets. Its expression is substantially down-regulated in leukemia cells. Consequently, JAK/STAT signaling is enhanced. Re-expression of CD45 suppresses JAK/STAT activation, delays leukemia development, and promotes apoptosis of t(8;21)-positive cells. This study demonstrates the benefit of combining gene expression and promoter occupancy profiling assays to identify molecular and potential therapeutic targets in human cancers and describes a previously unappreciated signaling pathway involving t(8;21) fusion proteins, CD45, and JAK/STAT, which could be a potential novel target for treating t(8;21) AML. © 2012 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Lo, M. C., Peterson, L. F., Yan, M., Cong, X., Jin, F., Shia, W. J., … Zhang, D. E. (2012). Combined gene expression and DNA occupancy profiling identifies potential therapeutic targets of t(8;21) AML. Blood, 120(7), 1473–1484. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2011-12-395335

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