Deletion of Asxl1 results in myelodysplasia and severe developmental defects in vivo Journal Article


Authors: Abdel-Wahab, O.; Gao, J.; Adli, M.; Dey, A.; Trimarchi, T.; Chung, Y. R.; Kuscu, C.; Hricik, T.; Ndiaye-Lobry, D.; LaFave, L. M.; Koche, R.; Shih, A. H.; Guryanova, O. A.; Kim, E.; Li, S.; Pandey, S.; Shin, J. Y.; Telis, L.; Liu, J.; Bhatt, P. K.; Monette, S.; Zhao, X.; Mason, C. E.; Park, C. Y.; Bernstein, B. E.; Aifantis, I.; Levine, R. L.
Article Title: Deletion of Asxl1 results in myelodysplasia and severe developmental defects in vivo
Abstract: Somatic Addition of Sex Combs Like 1 (ASXL1) mutations occur in 10-30% of patients with myeloid malignancies, most commonly in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs), and are associated with adverse outcome. Germline ASXL1 mutations occur in patients with Bohring-Opitz syndrome. Here, we show that constitutive loss of Asxl1 results in developmental abnormalities, including anophthalmia, microcephaly, cleft palates, and mandibular malformations. In contrast, hematopoietic-specific deletion of Asxl1 results in progressive, multilineage cytopenias and dysplasia in the context of increased numbers of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, characteristic features of human MDS. Serial transplantation of Asxl1-null hematopoietic cells results in a lethal myeloid disorder at a shorter latency than primary Asxl1 knockout (KO) mice. Asxl1 deletion reduces hematopoietic stem cell self-renewal, which is restored by concomitant deletion of Tet2, a gene commonly co-mutated with ASXL1 in MDS patients. Moreover, compound Asxl1/Tet2 deletion results in an MDS phenotype with hastened death compared with single-gene KO mice. Asxl1 loss results in a global reduction of H3K27 trimethylation and dysregulated expression of known regulators of hematopoiesis. RNA-Seq/ChIP-Seq analyses of Asxl1 in hematopoietic cells identify a subset of differentially expressed genes as direct targets of Asxl1. These findings underscore the importance of Asxl1 in Polycomb group function, development, and hematopoiesis. © 2013 Abdel-Wahab et al.
Journal Title: Journal of Experimental Medicine
Volume: 210
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0022-1007
Publisher: Rockefeller University Press  
Date Published: 2013-11-11
Start Page: 2641
End Page: 2659
Language: English
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20131141
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3832937
PUBMED: 24218140
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 2 January 2014 -- CODEN: JEMEA -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Alan H Shih
    59 Shih
  2. Ross Levine
    775 Levine
  3. Sebastien Monette
    148 Monette
  4. Christopher Yongchul Park
    90 Park
  5. Yu Sup Shin
    9 Shin
  6. Todd Raymond Hricik
    26 Hricik
  7. Young Rock Chung
    48 Chung
  8. Suveg Pandey
    11 Pandey
  9. Parva Kiran Bhatt
    4 Bhatt
  10. Eunhee Kim
    29 Kim
  11. Leonid   Telis
    6 Telis