Human ASXL1-Mutant Hematopoiesis Is Driven by a Truncated Protein Associated with Aberrant Deubiquitination of H2AK119

Author:

Köhnke Thomas12ORCID,Nuno Kevin A.12ORCID,Alder Catherine C.2ORCID,Gars Eric J.12ORCID,Phan Paul12ORCID,Fan Amy C.12ORCID,Majeti Ravindra12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology, Cancer Institute, and Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California.

2. 2Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California.

Abstract

Abstract Mutations in additional sex combs like 1 (ASXL1) confer poor prognosis both in myeloid malignancies and in premalignant clonal hematopoiesis (CH). However, the mechanisms by which these mutations contribute to disease initiation remain unresolved, and mutation-specific targeting has remained elusive. To address this, we developed a human disease model that recapitulates the disease trajectory from ASXL1-mutant CH to lethal myeloid malignancy. We demonstrate that mutations in ASXL1 lead to the expression of a functional, truncated protein and determine that truncated ASXL1 leads to global redistribution of the repressive chromatin mark H2AK119Ub, increased transposase-accessible chromatin, and activation of both myeloid and stem cell gene-expression programs. Finally, we demonstrate that H2AK119Ub levels are tied to truncated ASXL1 expression levels and leverage this observation to demonstrate that inhibition of the PRC1 complex might be an ASXL1-mutant–specific therapeutic vulnerability in both premalignant CH and myeloid malignancy. Significance: Mutant ASXL1 is a common driver of CH and myeloid malignancy. Using primary human HSPCs, we determine that truncated ASXL1 leads to redistribution of H2AK119Ub and may affect therapeutic vulnerability to PRC1 inhibition.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

American Society of Hematology

Leukemia and Lymphoma Society

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Cancer Institute

Mark Foundation For Cancer Research

Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group

Edward P. Evans Foundation

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

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