Login / Signup

Vitamin B5 and succinyl-CoA improve ineffective erythropoiesis in SF3B1 -mutated myelodysplasia.

Syed A MianCéline PhilippeEleni ManiatiPantelitsa ProtopapaTiffany BergotMarion PiganeauTravis NemkovDoriana Di BellaValle MoralesAndrew J FinchAngelo D'AlessandroKatiuscia BianchiJun WangPaolo GallipoliShahram KordastiAnne Sophie KubaschMichael CrossUwe PlatzbeckerDaniel H WisemanDominique BonnetDelphine G. BernardJohn G GribbenKevin Rouault-Pierre
Published in: Science translational medicine (2023)
Patients with myelodysplastic syndrome and ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS) present with symptomatic anemia due to ineffective erythropoiesis that impedes their quality of life and increases morbidity. More than 80% of patients with MDS-RS harbor splicing factor 3B subunit 1 (SF3B1) mutations, the founder aberration driving MDS-RS disease. Here, we report how mis-splicing of coenzyme A synthase ( COASY ), induced by mutations in SF3B1 , affects heme biosynthesis and erythropoiesis. Our data revealed that COASY was up-regulated during normal erythroid differentiation, and its silencing prevented the formation of erythroid colonies, impeded erythroid differentiation, and precluded heme accumulation. In patients with MDS-RS, loss of protein due to COASY mis-splicing led to depletion of both CoA and succinyl-CoA. Supplementation with COASY substrate (vitamin B5) rescued CoA and succinyl-CoA concentrations in SF3B1 mut cells and mended erythropoiesis differentiation defects in MDS-RS primary patient cells. Our findings reveal a key role of the COASY pathway in erythroid maturation and identify upstream and downstream metabolites of COASY as a potential treatment for anemia in patients with MDS-RS.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • fatty acid
  • cell cycle arrest
  • chronic kidney disease
  • single cell
  • ms ms
  • cell death
  • amino acid
  • deep learning
  • small molecule
  • climate change
  • iron deficiency
  • human health
  • pi k akt
  • data analysis