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Depletion of SIRT6 enzymatic activity increases acute myeloid leukemia cells’ vulnerability to DNA-damaging agents

Authors :
Antonia Cagnetta
Debora Soncini
Stefania Orecchioni
Giovanna Talarico
Paola Minetto
Fabio Guolo
Veronica Retali
Nicoletta Colombo
Enrico Carminati
Marino Clavio
Maurizio Miglino
Micaela Bergamaschi
Aimable Nahimana
Michel Duchosal
Katia Todoerti
Antonino Neri
Mario Passalacqua
Santina Bruzzone
Alessio Nencioni
Francesco Bertolini
Marco Gobbi
Roberto M. Lemoli
Michele Cea
Source :
Haematologica, Vol 103, Iss 1 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2018.

Abstract

Genomic instability plays a pathological role in various malignancies, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and thus represents a potential therapeutic target. Recent studies demonstrate that SIRT6, a NAD+-dependent nuclear deacetylase, functions as genome-guardian by preserving DNA integrity in different tumor cells. Here, we demonstrate that also CD34+ blasts from AML patients show ongoing DNA damage and SIRT6 overexpression. Indeed, we identified a poor-prognostic subset of patients, with widespread instability, which relies on SIRT6 to compensate for DNA-replication stress. As a result, SIRT6 depletion compromises the ability of leukemia cells to repair DNA double-strand breaks that, in turn, increases their sensitivity to daunorubicin and Ara-C, both in vitro and in vivo. In contrast, low SIRT6 levels observed in normal CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors explain their weaker sensitivity to genotoxic stress. Intriguingly, we have identified DNA-PKcs and CtIP deacetylation as crucial for SIRT6-mediated DNA repair. Together, our data suggest that inactivation of SIRT6 in leukemia cells leads to disruption of DNA-repair mechanisms, genomic instability and aggressive AML. This synthetic lethal approach, enhancing DNA damage while concomitantly blocking repair responses, provides the rationale for the clinical evaluation of SIRT6 modulators in the treatment of leukemia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03906078 and 15928721
Volume :
103
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.47f8604720224f48a3eef275ad4a6f41
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2017.176248