Abstract

Fusion protein RUNX1-ETO (AML1-ETO, RUNX1-RUNX1T1) is expressed as the result of the 8q22;21q22 translocation [t(8;21)], which is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities found in acute myeloid leukemia. RUNX1-ETO is thought to promote leukemia development through the aberrant regulation of RUNX1 (AML1) target genes. Repression of these genes occurs via the recruitment of the corepressors N-COR and SMRT due to their interaction with ETO. Mechanisms of RUNX1-ETO target gene upregulation remain less well understood. Here we show that RUNX1-ETO9a, the leukemogenic alternatively spliced transcript expressed from t(8;21), upregulates target gene Alox5, which is a gene critically required for the promotion of chronic myeloid leukemia development by BCR-ABL. Loss of Alox5 expression reduces activity of RUNX1-ETO9a, MLL-AF9 and PML-RARα in vitro. However, Alox5 is not essential for the induction of leukemia by RUNX1-ETO9a in vivo. Finally, we demonstrate that the upregulation of Alox5 by RUNX1-ETO9a occurs via the C2H2 zinc finger transcription factor KLF6, a protein required for early hematopoiesis and yolk sac development. Furthermore, KLF6 is specifically upregulated by RUNX1-ETO in human leukemia cells. This identifies KLF6 as a novel mediator of t(8;21) target gene regulation, providing a new mechanism for RUNX1-ETO transcriptional control.

Highlights

  • Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most prevalent form of adult leukemia [1]

  • Alox5 appears to be dispensable for AML development in a mouse model, it is required for some RUNX1-ETO functions

  • In studying the regulation of Alox5 expression, we have discovered a novel RUNX1-ETO partner protein, Krppel-like factor 6 (KLF6), which is both upregulated by RUNX1-ETO and participates in RUNX1-ETO gene regulation

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Summary

Introduction

Chromosomal translocations are found in over 80% of AML, the most common of which is t(8;21), occurring in up to 40% of AML cases categorized within the French-AmericanBritish (FAB) subtype M2 [2,3,4,5,6] This translocation results in the expression of fusion protein RUNX1-ETO. RUNX1-ETO exists as C-terminally truncated forms due to alternative splicing at exons 9 (RUNX1-ETO9a) and 11 (RUNX1-ETO11a) [10,11] Both isoforms lack the NHR4/MYND domain and are expressed in human t(8;21)+ leukemia patient samples, and RUNX1-ETO9a (RE9a) strongly promotes leukemia development in mice [10,11]

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