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Targeting the Sodium-Potassium Pump as a Therapeutic Strategy in Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

Constanze SchneiderHermes SpainkGabriela AlexeNeekesh V DhariaAshleigh MeyerLucy A MerickelDelan KhalidSebastian ScheichBjorn HauplLouis M StaudtThomas OellerichKimberly Stegmaier
Published in: Cancer research (2024)
Tissue-specific differences in the expression of paralog genes, which are not essential in most cell types due to the buffering effect of the partner pair, can make for highly selective gene dependencies. To identify selective paralogous targets for acute myeloid leukemia (AML), we integrated the Cancer Dependency Map with numerous datasets characterizing protein-protein interactions, paralog relationships, and gene expression in cancer models. Here, we identified ATP1B3 as a context-specific, paralog-related dependency in AML. ATP1B3, the beta subunit of the sodium-potassium pump (Na/K-ATP pump), interacts with the alpha subunit ATP1A1 to form an essential complex for maintaining cellular homeostasis and membrane potential in all eukaryotic cells. When ATP1B3's paralog ATP1B1 is poorly expressed, elimination of ATP1B3 leads to the destabilization of the Na/K-ATP pump. ATP1B1 expression is regulated through epigenetic silencing in hematopoietic lineage cells both through histone and DNA methylation in the promoter region. Loss of ATP1B3 in AML cells induced cell death in vitro and reduced leukemia burden in vivo, which could be rescued by stabilizing ATP1A1 through overexpression of ATP1B1. ATP1B3 is thus a potential therapeutic target for AML and other hematologic malignancies with low expression of ATP1B1.
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