Author
Listed:
- Amir Hosseini
(University of Oxford)
- Abhinav Dhall
(Harvard Medical School)
- Nemo Ikonen
(University of Helsinki)
- Natalia Sikora
(University of Oxford)
- Sylvain Nguyen
(University of Oxford)
- Yuqi Shen
(Headington)
- Maria Luisa Jurgensen Amaral
(University of California San Diego)
- Alan Jiao
(University of Oxford)
- Felice Wallner
(University of Oxford)
- Philipp Sergeev
(University of Helsinki)
- Yuhua Lim
(University of Oxford)
- Yuanqin Yang
(University of Oxford)
- Binje Vick
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
a partnership between DKFZ and University Hospital LMU Munich)
- Kimihito Cojin Kawabata
(Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Ari Melnick
(Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Paresh Vyas
(Headington
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust)
- Bing Ren
(University of California San Diego)
- Irmela Jeremias
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
a partnership between DKFZ and University Hospital LMU Munich
LMU Munich)
- Bethan Psaila
(University of Oxford
Headington
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust)
- Caroline A. Heckman
(University of Helsinki)
- M. Andrés Blanco
(University of Pennsylvania)
- Yang Shi
(University of Oxford
Harvard Medical School)
Abstract
Impaired differentiation is a hallmark of myeloid malignancies1,2. Therapies that enable cells to circumvent the differentiation block, such as all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and arsenic trioxide (ATO), are by and large curative in acute promyelocytic leukaemia3, but whether ‘differentiation therapy’ is a generalizable therapeutic approach for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) and beyond remains incompletely understood. Here we demonstrate that simultaneous inhibition of the histone demethylase LSD1 (LSD1i) and the WNT pathway antagonist GSK3 kinase4 (GSK3i) robustly promotes therapeutic differentiation of established AML cell lines and primary human AML cells, as well as reducing tumour burden and significantly extending survival in a patient-derived xenograft mouse model. Mechanistically, this combination promotes differentiation by activating genes in the type I interferon pathway via inducing expression of transcription factors such as IRF7 (LSD1i) and the co-activator β-catenin (GSK3i), and their selective co-occupancy at targets such as STAT1, which is necessary for combination-induced differentiation. Combination treatment also suppresses the canonical, pro-oncogenic WNT pathway and cell cycle genes. Analysis of datasets from patients with AML suggests a correlation between the combination-induced transcription signature and better prognosis, highlighting clinical potential of this strategy. Collectively, this combination strategy rewires transcriptional programs to suppress stemness and to promote differentiation, which may have important therapeutic implications for AML and WNT-driven cancers beyond AML.
Suggested Citation
Amir Hosseini & Abhinav Dhall & Nemo Ikonen & Natalia Sikora & Sylvain Nguyen & Yuqi Shen & Maria Luisa Jurgensen Amaral & Alan Jiao & Felice Wallner & Philipp Sergeev & Yuhua Lim & Yuanqin Yang & Bin, 2025.
"Perturbing LSD1 and WNT rewires transcription to synergistically induce AML differentiation,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 642(8067), pages 508-518, June.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:642:y:2025:i:8067:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08915-1
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08915-1
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