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A JAK/STAT-mediated inflammatory signaling cascade drives oncogenesis in AF10-rearranged AML.

Bo-Rui ChenAnagha DeshpandeKarina BarbosaMaria KleppeXue LeiNarayana YeddulaPablo Sánchez VelaAlexandre Rosa CamposRobert J Wechsler-ReyaAnindya BagchiSoheil MeshinchiConnie EavesIrmela JeremiasTorsten HaferlachDavid A FrankZe'ev A RonaiSumit ChandaScott A ArmstrongPeter D AdamsRoss L LevineAniruddha J Deshpande
Published in: Blood (2021)
Leukemias bearing fusions of the AF10/MLLT10 gene are associated with poor prognosis, and therapies targeting these fusion proteins (FPs) are lacking. To understand mechanisms underlying AF10 fusion-mediated leukemogenesis, we generated inducible mouse models of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) driven by the most common AF10 FPs, PICALM/CALM-AF10 and KMT2A/MLL-AF10, and performed comprehensive characterization of the disease using transcriptomic, epigenomic, proteomic, and functional genomic approaches. Our studies provide a detailed map of gene networks and protein interactors associated with key AF10 fusions involved in leukemia. Specifically, we report that AF10 fusions activate a cascade of JAK/STAT-mediated inflammatory signaling through direct recruitment of JAK1 kinase. Inhibition of the JAK/STAT signaling by genetic Jak1 deletion or through pharmacological JAK/STAT inhibition elicited potent antioncogenic effects in mouse and human models of AF10 fusion AML. Collectively, our study identifies JAK1 as a tractable therapeutic target in AF10-rearranged leukemias.
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