Diagenode

Kmt2c mutations enhance HSC self-renewal capacity and convey a selectiveadvantage after chemotherapy.


Chen, Ran et al.

The myeloid tumor suppressor KMT2C is recurrently deleted in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML), particularly therapy-related MDS/AML (t-MDS/t-AML), as part of larger chromosome 7 deletions. Here, we show that KMT2C deletions convey a selective advantage to hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) after chemotherapy treatment that may precipitate t-MDS/t-AML. Kmt2c deletions markedly enhance murine HSC self-renewal capacity without altering proliferation rates. Haploid Kmt2c deletions convey a selective advantage only when HSCs are driven into cycle by a strong proliferative stimulus, such as chemotherapy. Cycling Kmt2c-deficient HSCs fail to differentiate appropriately, particularly in response to interleukin-1. Kmt2c deletions mitigate histone methylation/acetylation changes that accrue as HSCs cycle after chemotherapy, and they impair enhancer recruitment during HSC differentiation. These findings help explain why Kmt2c deletions are more common in t-MDS/t-AML than in de novo AML or clonal hematopoiesis: they selectively protect cycling HSCs from differentiation without inducing HSC proliferation themselves.

Tags
Antibody

Share this article

Published
February, 2021

Source

Products used in this publication

  • cut and tag antibody icon
    C15410194
    H3K4me1 Antibody - ChIP-seq Grade
  • cut and tag antibody icon
    C15410196
    H3K27ac Antibody - ChIP-seq Grade

活动

  • APHL 2024
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
    May 6-May 9, 2024
 查看所有活动

新闻

 查看所有新闻


The European Regional Development Fund and Wallonia are investing in your future.

Extension of industrial buildings and new laboratories.


       Site map   |   Contact us   |   Conditions of sales   |   Conditions of purchase   |   Privacy policy   |   Diagenode Diagnostics