Alu-dependent RNA editing of GLI1 promotes malignant regeneration in multiple myeloma

Elisa Lazzari(University of California San Diego), Phoebe Mondala(University of California San Diego), Nathaniel P. Delos Santos(University of California San Diego), Amber Miller(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Gabriel Pineda(University of San Diego), Qingfei Jiang(University of California San Diego), Heather Leu(University of California San Diego), Shawn Ali(University of California San Diego), Anusha-Preethi Ganesan(University of California San Diego), Christina Wu(University of California San Diego), Caitlin Costello(University of California San Diego), Mark D. Minden(University Health Network), Raffaella Chiaramonte(University of Milan), A. Keith Stewart(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Leslie Crews(University of California San Diego), Catriona Jamieson(University of California San Diego)
Nature Communications
November 28, 2017
Cited by 142Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Despite novel therapies, relapse of multiple myeloma (MM) is virtually inevitable. Amplification of chromosome 1q, which harbors the inflammation-responsive RNA editase adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR)1 gene, occurs in 30-50% of MM patients and portends a poor prognosis. Since adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing has recently emerged as a driver of cancer progression, genomic amplification combined with inflammatory cytokine activation of ADAR1 could stimulate MM progression and therapeutic resistance. Here, we report that high ADAR1 RNA expression correlates with reduced patient survival rates in the MMRF CoMMpass data set. Expression of wild-type, but not mutant, ADAR1 enhances Alu-dependent editing and transcriptional activity of GLI1, a Hedgehog (Hh) pathway transcriptional activator and self-renewal agonist, and promotes immunomodulatory drug resistance in vitro. Finally, ADAR1 knockdown reduces regeneration of high-risk MM in serially transplantable patient-derived xenografts. These data demonstrate that ADAR1 promotes malignant regeneration of MM and if selectively inhibited may obviate progression and relapse.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis