Abstract
SIRT1 is a NAD+ dependent histone deacetylase, which has been shown to act as an important regulator of apoptosis, DNA-repair and is involved in the maintenance of genetic integrity under conditions of cellular stress. Beside deacetylation of histones H4K16, SIRT1 has numeral other substrates including KU70, FOXO1 or p53. SIRT1 deacetylates p53 at lysine 382 thereby reducing its transcriptional activity followed by loss of p53 dependent apoptosis in response to cell damage. The activity of SIRT1 is negatively regulated by DBC1 (Deleted in Breast Cancer 1) and involves protein–protein interaction (Kim et al., Nature 2008). Recent reports have demonstrated increased expression of SIRT1 in leukemic cells. Of note, SIRT1 seems to be specifically essential to maintain stem cell activity in CML leukemic stem cells (Li et al, Cancer Cell, 2012), however the role of SIRT1 in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and in the context of other oncogenic tyrosine kinases is poorly understood.
To characterize the role of SIRT1 in acute myeloid leukemia in the context of defined genetic backgrounds.
To investigate the functional role of SIRT1 we performed expression analysis studies. Inhibition of SIRT1 was achieved by shRNA experiments and pharmacological targeting. Functional consequences were addressed by immunoblotting, co-immunoprecipitation, cell death assays, gamma-H2AX staining and xenotransplantion experiments.
SIRT1 protein expression analysis in primary human AML samples (n=20) and cell lines (n=13) showed preferential high expression levels in cells harboring FLT3-ITD mutations or oncogenic KRAS/NRAS. Inhibition of FLT3 signaling using shRNA-mediated knockdown of FLT3 or upon treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors caused a time and dose dependent suppression of SIRT1 expression accompanied by an increase in p53 acetylation. Vice versa, overexpression of FLT3-ITD in BaF/3 cells or in several murine leukemia models (e.g. MLL/AF9 +/-FLT3-ITD; AML1/ETO +/-FLT3-ITD) induced significant upregulation of SIRT1. Targeting SIRT1 using the SIRT1/2 inhibitor Tenovin-6 (TV-6) or knockdown of SIRT1 resulted in a slight increase in apoptotic cell death in primary AML samples and cell lines. In contrast, inhibition of SIRT1 significantly sensitized to FLT3 inhibitor therapy. Of note, the combination of TV-6 and midostaurin inhibited colony growth and replating activity in MLL-AF9 or AML1-ETO cells harboring FLT3-ITD mutations. Further, knockdown of SIRT1 in the AML cell line MV4-11 expressing a doxycycline-regulated SIRT-shRNA resulted in prolonged survival in a xenotransplantation model. The observed effects prompted us to investigate whether mutated FLT3 is directly involved in the regulation of SIRT1. Inhibition of FLT3-ITD kinase activity caused an increased phosphorylation of the physiological SIRT1-inhibitor DBC1 followed by binding of SIRT1 as revealed by co-immunoprecipitation experiments. We also noticed a slight increase in ATM/ATR phosphorylation and an increase in ATM-DBC1 binding upon FLT3-ITD inhibition indicating SIRT1 inhibition via the ATM-DBC1-SIRT1 axis. These effects were substantially enhanced upon treatment with genotoxic agents (cytarabine; irradiation) in combination with midostaurin compared to either agent alone and were accompanied by increased p53 acetylation and an increased number of gamma-H2AX foci.
SIRT1 is overexpressed in AML cells and partially regulated by FLT3-ITD or oncogenic RAS. In FLT3-ITD mutated cells SIRT1 is constitutively activated, likely via the inhibition of the physiological inhibitor DBC1. Pharmacologic targeting of SIRT1 sensitizes AML cells to TKI therapy or genotoxic agents and partially restored the FLT3-ITD associated defective stress response pathway ATM-DBC1-SIRT1 resulting in activation of p53.
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Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.