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Caspase-2 is essential for proliferation and self-renewal of nucleophosmin-mutated acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors :
Sakthivel, Dharaniya
Brown-Suedel, Alexandra N.
Lopez, Karla E.
Salgar, Suruchi
Coutinho, Luiza E.
Keane, Francesca
Shixia Huang
Mc Sherry, Kenneth
Charendoff, Chloé I.
Dunne, Kevin P.
Robichaux, Dexter J.
Vargas-Hernández, Alexander
Bao Chau Le
Shin, Crystal S.
Carisey, Alexandre F.
Poreba, Marcin
Flanagan, Jonathan M.
Bouchier-Hayes, Lisa
Source :
Science Advances. 8/2/2024, Vol. 10 Issue 31, p1-19. 19p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Mutation in nucleophosmin (NPM1) causes relocalization of this normally nucleolar protein to the cytoplasm (NPM1c+). Despite NPM1 mutation being the most common driver mutation in cytogenetically normal adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the mechanisms of NPM1c+-induced leukemogenesis remain unclear. Caspase-2 is a proapoptotic protein activated by NPM1 in the nucleolus. Here, we show that caspase-2 is also activated by NPM1c+ in the cytoplasm and DNA damage-induced apoptosis is caspase-2 dependent in NPM1c+ but not in NPM1wt AML cells. Strikingly, in NPM1c+ cells, caspase-2 loss results in profound cell cycle arrest, differentiation, and down-regulation of stem cell pathways that regulate pluripotency including impairment of the AKT/mTORC1 pathways, and inhibition of Rictor cleavage. In contrast, there were minimal differences in proliferation, differentiation, or the transcriptional profile of NPM1wt cells lacking caspase-2. Our results show that caspase-2 is essential for proliferation and self-renewal of AML cells expressing mutated NPM1. This study demonstrates that caspase-2 is a major effector of NPM1c+ function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
10
Issue :
31
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science Advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178895051
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adj3145