Meis1 is an essential and rate-limiting regulator of MLL leukemia stem cell potential

  1. Piu Wong1,
  2. Masayuki Iwasaki1,
  3. Tim C.P. Somervaille1,
  4. Chai Wai Eric So2, and
  5. Michael L. Cleary1,3
  1. 1 Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305, USA;
  2. 2 Haemato-Oncology Section, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Greater London SM2 5NG, United Kingdom

Abstract

Oncogenic mutations of the MLL histone methyltransferase confer an unusual ability to transform non-self-renewing myeloid progenitors into leukemia stem cells (LSCs) by mechanisms that remain poorly defined. Misregulation of Hox genes is likely to be critical for LSC induction and maintenance but alone it does not recapitulate the phenotype and biology of MLL leukemias, which are clinically heterogeneous—presumably reflecting differences in LSC biology and/or frequency. TALE (three-amino-acid loop extension) class homeodomain proteins of the Pbx and Meis families are also misexpressed in this context, and we thus employed knockout, knockdown, and dominant-negative genetic techniques to investigate the requirements and contributions of these factors in MLL oncoprotein-induced acute myeloid leukemia. Our studies show that induction and maintenance of MLL transformation requires Meis1 and is codependent on the redundant contributions of Pbx2 and Pbx3. Meis1 in particular serves a major role in establishing LSC potential, and determines LSC frequency by quantitatively regulating the extent of self-renewal, differentiation arrest, and cycling, as well as the rate of in vivo LSC generation from myeloid progenitors. Thus, TALE proteins are critical downstream effectors within an essential homeoprotein network that serves a rate-limiting regulatory role in MLL leukemogenesis.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

    3 E-MAIL mcleary{at}stanford.edu; FAX (650) 498-6222.

  • Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.

  • Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1602107

    • Received August 7, 2007.
    • Accepted September 12, 2007.
  • Freely available online through the Genes & Development Open Access option.

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