Abstract

Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is characterized by the expansion of clonally-derived mutant hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. Many patients do not respond to standard chemotherapy because AML cells acquire mutations that exploit inflammatory and cell death pathways, allowing them to evade cell death. Targeted therapies are urgently needed to block AML cell pro-survival and inflammatory signaling for more effective outcomes. One promising area of interest is Caspase-1 (CASP1), a cysteine-aspartic acid protease responsible for cleaving the precursors of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and Gasdermin D, which induces pyroptosis, into their active mature peptides. In myeloid malignancies, IL-1β levels are significantly elevated, and pyroptosis has been linked to ineffective hematopoiesis as observed in MDS, thereby implicating CASP1. CASP1 is typically expressed as a zymogen (Pro-CASP1) that can be cleaved into an active enzyme. In this report, we present a novel and unexpected role for Pro-CASP1, which appears to be independent of its proteolytic function, in MDS/AML leukemic cells. Pyroptosis, an inflammatory cell death mechanism, is driven by CASP1-mediated osmotic lysis and IL-1b secretion. Notably, CASP1 expression is significantly higher in AML patients compared to healthy hematopoietic cells, and elevated CASP1 expression in AML patients correlates with shorter overall survival. In leukemic cells, CASP1 primarily exists in its zymogen form, lacking the ability to induce pyroptosis. It is thus unexpected that elevated CASP1 expression, which typically leads to heightened susceptibility to pyroptotic cell death, does not result in pyroptosis in leukemic cells, and the underlying mechanisms for this evasion remain unknown. To investigate Pro-CASP1's significance in AML cells, we used CRISPR-Cas9 to create Pro-CASP1 knockout (Pro-CASP1 KO) human isogenic MDS and AML cell lines (THP1 and MDSL). Pro-CASP1 KO MDS/AML cells showed reduced cell growth and leukemic colony forming potential in methylcellulose compared to isogenic WT control cells. When Pro-CASP1 KO THP1 AML cells were transplanted into immunocompromised mice, the loss of Pro-CASP1 significantly reduced leukemic cell burden and extended overall survival. We next preformed experiments to probe the mechanism of action of Pro-CASP1 in AML cells. Previous studies suggest that Pro-CASP1 can function as a scaffold to elicit downstream signaling without cleaving into its activated form. The functional defect in Pro-CASP1 KO THP1 AML cells was rescued with full-length Pro-CASP1, but not with a scaffolding mutant of CASP1, indicating a specific dependency of leukemic cells on the zymogen form of CASP1. To precisely delineate which domains of Pro-CASP1 are essential for AML, we performed a tiled CRISPR dropout screen in MDSL and THP1 cells. The results showed similar CRISPR-Knockout High Sensitivity (CKHS) domain footprints in both cell lines mapping to the N-terminal CARD and the Inter-Domain Linker (IDL) domains. These results indicate that Pro-CASP1's proteolytic function was found to be dispensable, whereas the CARD domain, a scaffolding region, was crucial for leukemogenesis. We next investigated how loss of Pro-CASP1 affects inflammatory signaling in AML cells. Deletion of Pro-CASP1 in THP1 AML cells led to excessive and constitutive activation of NF-kB as indicated by nuclear translocation and phosphorylation of p65/RelA. Restoring NF-kB regulation using the inhibitor of kappa B (IkB) super-repressor (IkB-SR) was sufficient to reverse the leukemic progenitor defect and cell viability in Pro-CASP1 KO AML cells. These findings suggest that Pro-CASP1 is required for AML cells to finetune canonical NF-kB activation. Conversely, loss of Pro-CASP1 results in excessive NF-kB activation that is incompatible with AML, consistent with previous observations (Ellegast et al., Cancer Discovery 2022). In summary, Pro-CASP1 serves as a critical signaling hub, fine-tuning NF-kB pathways independently of its proteolytic function in leukemic cells. Its loss exposes leukemic cells to functional and therapeutic vulnerabilities.

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