Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Receptor 3 Potentiates Inflammatory Programs in Normal and Leukemia Stem Cells to Promote Differentiation

Stephanie Z. Xie(University Health Network), Kerstin B. Kaufmann(University Health Network), Weijia Wang(ETH Zurich), Michelle Chan‐Seng‐Yue(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Olga I. Gan(University Health Network), Elisa Laurenti(University Health Network), Laura García‐Prat(University Health Network), Shin‐ichiro Takayanagi(University Health Network), Stanley Ng(University of Toronto), Changjiang Xu(University of Toronto), Andy G.X. Zeng(University Health Network), Liqing Jin(University Health Network), Jessica McLeod(University Health Network), Elvin Wagenblast(University Health Network), Amanda Mitchell(University Health Network), James A. Kennedy(University Health Network), Qiang Liu(University Health Network), Héléna Boutzen(University Health Network), Melissa Kleinau(University Health Network), Joseph Jargstorf(University Health Network), Gareth D. Holmes(University Health Network), Yang Zhang(ETH Zurich), Véronique Voisin(University of Toronto), Gary D. Bader(University of Toronto), Jean Wang(University Health Network), Yusuf A. Hannun(Stony Brook University), Chiara Luberto(Stony Brook School), Timm Schroeder(ETH Zurich), Mark D. Minden(University Health Network), John E. Dick(University Health Network)
Blood Cancer Discovery
December 1, 2020
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a caricature of normal hematopoiesis driven from leukemia stem cells (LSC) that share some hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) programs including responsiveness to inflammatory signaling. Although inflammation dysregulates mature myeloid cells and influences stemness programs and lineage determination in HSCs by activating stress myelopoiesis, such roles in LSCs are poorly understood. Here, we show that S1PR3, a receptor for the bioactive lipid sphingosine-1-phosphate, is a central regulator that drives myeloid differentiation and activates inflammatory programs in both HSCs and LSCs. S1PR3-mediated inflammatory signatures varied in a continuum from primitive to mature myeloid states across cohorts of patients with AML, each with distinct phenotypic and clinical properties. S1PR3 was high in LSCs and blasts of mature myeloid samples with linkages to chemosensitivity, whereas S1PR3 activation in primitive samples promoted LSC differentiation leading to eradication. Our studies open new avenues for therapeutic target identification specific for each AML subset. Significance: S1PR3 is a novel regulator of myeloid fate in normal hematopoiesis that is heterogeneously expressed in AML. S1PR3 marks a subset of less primitive AML cases with a distinct inflammatory signature and therefore has clinical implications as both a therapeutic target and a biomarker to distinguish primitive from mature AML. See related commentary by Yang et al., p. 3. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1


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