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Data from In Vivo Screening Unveils Pervasive RNA-Binding Protein Dependencies in Leukemic Stem Cells and Identifies ELAVL1 as a Therapeutic Target

Authors :
Kristin J. Hope
Gene W. Yeo
Daniel Schramek
Mark D. Minden
John E. Dick
Stefan Aigner
Sasan Zandi
Soheil Jahangiri
Zaldy Balde
Nicholas Wong
Joshua Xu
Pratik Joshi
Steven Moreira
Emily Tsao
Amanda Tajik
Derek C.H. Chan
Lina Liu
Sampath K. Loganathan
Brian A. Yee
He Tian Chen
Ava Keyvani Chahi
Laura de Rooij
Ana Vujovic
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is fueled by leukemic stem cells (LSC) whose determinants are challenging to discern from hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) or uncover by approaches focused on general cell properties. We have identified a set of RNA-binding proteins (RBP) selectively enriched in human AML LSCs. Using an in vivo two-step CRISPR-Cas9 screen to assay stem cell functionality, we found 32 RBPs essential for LSCs in MLL-AF9;NrasG12D AML. Loss-of-function approaches targeting key hit RBP ELAVL1 compromised LSC-driven in vivo leukemic reconstitution, and selectively depleted primitive malignant versus healthy cells. Integrative multiomics revealed differentiation, splicing, and mitochondrial metabolism as key features defining the leukemic ELAVL1–mRNA interactome with mitochondrial import protein, TOMM34, being a direct ELAVL1-stabilized target whose repression impairs AML propagation. Altogether, using a stem cell–adapted in vivo CRISPR screen, this work demonstrates pervasive reliance on RBPs as regulators of LSCs and highlights their potential as therapeutic targets in AML.Significance:LSC-targeted therapies remain a significant unmet need in AML. We developed a stem-cell–adapted in vivo CRISPR screen to identify key LSC drivers. We uncover widespread RNA-binding protein dependencies in LSCs, including ELAVL1, which we identify as a novel therapeutic vulnerability through its regulation of mitochondrial metabolism.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 171

Details

ISSN :
26433230
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c408b73a88713bd19863989035bb281