Wong Yan-Fung, Micklem Chris N, Taguchi Masataka, Itonaga Hidehiro, Sawayama Yasushi, Imanishi Daisuke, Nishikawa Shinichi, Miyazaki Yasushi, Jakt Lars Martin
Laboratory for Stem Cell Biology, RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe, Japan; Department of Hematology, Atomic Bomb Disease and Hibakusya Medicine Unit, Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki, Japan; The Danish Stem Cell Centre (DanStem), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom; All About Science Japan, Kobe, Japan; Department of Systems Medicine, Mitsunada Sakaguchi Laboratory, Keio University School of Medicine, Institute of Integrated Medical Research, Tokyo, Japan
Laboratory for Stem Cell Biology, RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe, Japan; Department of Hematology, Atomic Bomb Disease and Hibakusya Medicine Unit, Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki, Japan; The Danish Stem Cell Centre (DanStem), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom; All About Science Japan, Kobe, Japan; Department of Systems Medicine, Mitsunada Sakaguchi Laboratory, Keio University School of Medicine, Institute of Integrated Medical Research, Tokyo, Japan.
Stem Cells Transl Med. 2014 Oct;3(10):1188-98. doi: 10.5966/sctm.2014-0035. Epub 2014 Aug 13.
Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is a disorder of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that is often treated with DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) inhibitors (5-azacytidine [AZA], 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine), suggesting a role for DNA methylation in disease progression. How DNMT inhibition retards disease progression and how DNA methylation contributes to MDS remain unclear. We analyzed global DNA methylation in purified CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors from MDS patients undergoing multiple rounds of AZA treatment. Differential methylation between MDS phenotypes was observed primarily at developmental regulators not expressed within the hematopoietic compartment and was distinct from that observed between healthy hematopoietic cell types. After AZA treatment, we observed only limited DNA demethylation at sites that varied between patients. This suggests that a subset of the stem cell population is resistant to AZA and provides a basis for disease relapse. Using gene expression data from patient samples and an in vitro AZA treatment study, we identified differentially methylated genes that can be activated following treatment and that remain silent in the CD34+ stem cell compartment of high-risk MDS patients. Haploinsufficiency in mice of one of these genes (NR4A2) has been shown to lead to excessive HSC proliferation, and our data suggest that suppression of NR4A2 by DNA methylation may be involved in MDS progression.
骨髓增生异常综合征(MDS)是一种造血干细胞(HSC)疾病,通常用DNA甲基转移酶1(DNMT1)抑制剂(5-氮杂胞苷[AZA]、5-氮杂-2'-脱氧胞苷)进行治疗,这表明DNA甲基化在疾病进展中起作用。DNMT抑制如何延缓疾病进展以及DNA甲基化如何导致MDS仍不清楚。我们分析了接受多轮AZA治疗的MDS患者纯化的CD34+造血祖细胞中的全基因组DNA甲基化。MDS表型之间的差异甲基化主要出现在造血区室中未表达的发育调节因子上,并且与健康造血细胞类型之间观察到的差异甲基化不同。AZA治疗后,我们仅在患者之间存在差异的位点观察到有限的DNA去甲基化。这表明干细胞群体的一个亚群对AZA有抗性,并为疾病复发提供了基础。利用患者样本的基因表达数据和一项体外AZA治疗研究,我们鉴定出了在治疗后可被激活且在高危MDS患者的CD34+干细胞区室中保持沉默的差异甲基化基因。其中一个基因(NR4A2)在小鼠中的单倍剂量不足已被证明会导致HSC过度增殖,我们的数据表明DNA甲基化对NR4A2的抑制可能参与了MDS的进展。