Publications

A heterozygous CEBPA mutation disrupting the bZIP domain in a RUNX1 and SRSF2 mutational background causes MDS disease progression

Almaghrabi R, Alyahyawi Y, Keane P, Mian SA, Habel K, Atkinson A, Ward C, Bayley R, Sargas C, Menendez P, Murphy GJ, Sobahy T, Baghdadi MA, Flemban AF, Kabrah SM, Torres-Ruiz R, Papapetrou EP, Akerman I, Raghavan M, Barragan E, Bonnet D, Bonifer C, Garcia P.

Nat Commun

Myelodysplastic syndrome disease (MDS) is caused by the successive acquisition of mutations and thus displays a variable risk for progression to AML. Mutations in CEBPA are commonly associated with a high risk of disease progression, but whether they are causative for AML development is unclear. To analyse the molecular basis of disease progression we generated MDS patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells from a low risk male patient harbouring RUNX1/SRSF2 mutations. This experimental model faithfully recapitulates the patient disease phenotypes upon hematopoietic differentiation. Introduction of a frameshift mutation affecting the C/EBPα bZIP domain in cells from low-risk stages mimicks disease progression by reducing clonogenicity of myeloid cells, blocking granulopoiesis and increasing erythroid progenitor self-renewal capacity. The acquisition of this mutation reshapes the chromatin landscape at distal cis-regulatory regions and promotes changes in cellular composition as observed by single cell RNAseq. Mutant C/EBPα is therefore causative for MDS disease progression. Our work identifies mutant CEBPA as causative for MDS disease progression, providing a new isogenic MDS experimental model for drug screening to improve diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

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