Identification of a Musashi2 translocation as a novel oncogene in myeloid leukemia

Author:

Spinler Kyle12,Hamilton Michael12,Bajaj Jeevisha12,Shima Yutaka12,Diaz Emily12,Kritzik Marcie1234,Reya Tannishtha1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Pharmacology and Medicine, University of California San Diego School of Medicine

2. Moores Cancer Center, University of California San Diego School of Medicine

3. Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University Medical Center

4. Department of Physiology and Cellular Biophysics, Columbia University Medical Center

Abstract

Myeloid leukemias, diseases marked by aggressiveness and poor outcomes, are frequently triggered by oncogenic translocations. In the case of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) the BCR-ABL fusion initiates chronic phase disease with second hits allowing progression to blast crisis. Although Gleevec has been transformative for CML, blast crisis CML remains relatively drug resistant. Here we show that MSI2-HOXA9, a translocation with an unknown role in cancer, can serve as a second hit in driving bcCML. Compared to BCR-ABL, BCR-ABL/MSI2-HOXA9 led to a more aggressive disease in vivo with decreased latency, increased lethality and a differentiation blockade that is a hallmark of blast crisis. Domain mapping revealed that the MSI2 RNA binding domain RRM1 had a preferential impact on growth and lethality of bcCML relative to RRM2 or the HOXA9 domain. Mechanistically, MSI2-HOXA9 triggered global downstream changes with a preferential upregulation of mitochondrial components. Consistent with this, BCR-ABL/MSI2-HOXA9 cells exhibited a significant increase in mitochondrial respiration. These data suggest that MSI2-HOXA9 acts, at least in part, by increasing expression of the mitochondrial polymerase Polrmt and augmenting mitochondrial function and basal respiration in blast crisis. Collectively, our findings demonstrate for the first time that translocations involving the stem and developmental signal MSI2 can be oncogenic, and suggest that MSI, which we found to be a frequent partner for an array of translocations, could also be a driver mutation across solid cancers.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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