Acquired miR-142 deficit in leukemic stem cells suffices to drive chronic myeloid leukemia into blast crisis

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Abstract

The mechanisms underlying the transformation of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) from chronic phase (CP) to blast crisis (BC) are not fully elucidated. Here, we show lower levels of miR-142 in CD34+CD38− blasts from BC CML patients than in those from CP CML patients, suggesting that miR-142 deficit is implicated in BC evolution. Thus, we create miR-142 knockout CML (i.e., miR-142−/− BCR-ABL) mice, which develop BC and die sooner than miR-142 wt CML (i.e., miR-142+/+ BCR-ABL) mice, which instead remain in CP CML. Leukemic stem cells (LSCs) from miR-142−/− BCR-ABL mice recapitulate the BC phenotype in congenic recipients, supporting LSC transformation by miR-142 deficit. State-transition and mutual information analyses of “bulk” and single cell RNA-seq data, metabolomic profiling and functional metabolic assays identify enhanced fatty acid β-oxidation, oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial fusion in LSCs as key steps in miR-142-driven BC evolution. A synthetic CpG-miR-142 mimic oligodeoxynucleotide rescues the BC phenotype in miR-142−/− BCR-ABL mice and patient-derived xenografts.

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Zhang, B., Zhao, D., Chen, F., Frankhouser, D., Wang, H., Pathak, K. V., … Marcucci, G. (2023). Acquired miR-142 deficit in leukemic stem cells suffices to drive chronic myeloid leukemia into blast crisis. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41167-z

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