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DEK::NUP214 acts as an XPO1-dependent transcriptional activator of essential leukemia genes.

The t(6;9)(p22.3;q34.1) translocation/DEK::NUP214 fusion protein defines a distinct subgroup of younger AML patients classified as a separate disease entity by the World Health Organization. DEK is a nuclear factor with multifunctional roles, including gene regulation, while its fusion partner, NUP214, plays a pivotal role in nuclear export by interacting with transport receptors such as XPO1. However, the precise mechanism by which DEK::NUP214 drives leukemia remains unclear. A comprehensive multi-omics comparison of 57 AML primary samples (including whole genome sequencing, targeted sequencing, transcriptomics, and drug screening with >500 compounds) revealed that t(6;9) cases display a selective response to XPO1 inhibitors (Selinexor & Eltanexor) and a distinct transcriptomic signature characterized by the overexpression of FOXC1 and HOX genes that are key leukemia mediators. CUT&RUN experiments demonstrated the direct binding of DEK::NUP214 to the promoters of FOXC1 and HOXA/B clusters. Strikingly, the expression of these genes and the binding of DEK::NUP214 to their regulatory regions were selectively reduced upon XPO1 inhibition in t(6;9) cells. Altogether, these results identified a novel function of DEK::NUP214 as an XPO1-dependent transcriptional activator of key leukemia drivers and provide a rationale to explore the use of XPO1 inhibitors in this patient population.

Date de publication
9 avril 2025
Chercheur(euse)s
Kaya F, Bewicke-Copley F, Miettinen JJ, Casado P, Leddy E, Deniz O, Lavallée VP, Philippe C, Zheng J, Grebien F, Khan N, Krizsán S, Saad J, Nolin-Lapalme A, Hébert J, Lemieux S, Audemard E, Matthews J, Grantham M, Di Bella D, Wennerberg K, Parsons A, Gribben J, Cavenagh JD, Freeman SD, Bödör C, Sauvageau G, Wang J, Llamas-Sillero P, Cazier JB, Taussig DC, Bonnet D, Cutillas PR, Heckman CA, Fitzgibbon J, Rouault-Pierre K, Rio-Machin A
Référence PubMed
Leukemia 2025
ID PubMed
40204893
Affiliation
Centre for Haemato-Oncology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.