An integrated approach to dissecting oncogene addiction implicates a Myb-coordinated self-renewal program as essential for leukemia maintenance

Johannes Zuber(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Amy Rappaport(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Weijun Luo(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Eric Wang(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Chong Chen(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Angelina V. Vaseva(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Junwei Shi(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Susann Weissmueller(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Christof Fellman(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Meredith J. Taylor(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Martina Weissenboeck(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Thomas G. Graeber(University of California, Los Angeles), Scott C. Kogan(University of California, San Francisco), Christopher R. Vakoc(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Scott W. Lowe(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Genes & Development
August 1, 2011
Cited by 278Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Although human cancers have complex genotypes and are genomically unstable, they often remain dependent on the continued presence of single-driver mutations-a phenomenon dubbed "oncogene addiction." Such dependencies have been demonstrated in mouse models, where conditional expression systems have revealed that oncogenes able to initiate cancer are often required for tumor maintenance and progression, thus validating the pathways they control as therapeutic targets. Here, we implement an integrative approach that combines genetically defined mouse models, transcriptional profiling, and a novel inducible RNAi platform to characterize cellular programs that underlie addiction to MLL-AF9-a fusion oncoprotein involved in aggressive forms of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We show that MLL-AF9 contributes to leukemia maintenance by enforcing a Myb-coordinated program of aberrant self-renewal involving genes linked to leukemia stem cell potential and poor prognosis in human AML. Accordingly, partial and transient Myb suppression precisely phenocopies MLL-AF9 withdrawal and eradicates aggressive AML in vivo without preventing normal myelopoiesis, indicating that strategies to inhibit Myb-dependent aberrant self-renewal programs hold promise as effective and cancer-specific therapeutics. Together, our results identify Myb as a critical mediator of oncogene addiction in AML, delineate relevant Myb target genes that are amenable to pharmacologic inhibition, and establish a general approach for dissecting oncogene addiction in vivo.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis