Key Points
Alternative splicing that is controlled by the co-transcriptional splicing complex may be therapeutically tractable in high-risk B-ALL
Models of High-risk B-ALL are susceptible to pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of RBM39
There are few options for patients with relapse/refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), thus this is a major area of unmet medical need. Here, we reveal that inclusion of a poison exon in RBM39, which could be induced both by CDK9 or CDK9 independent CMGC (cyclin-dependent kinases, mitogen-activated protein kinases, glycogen synthase kinases, CDC-like kinases) kinase inhibition, is recognized by the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway for degradation. Targeting this poison exon in RBM39 with CMGC inhibitors lead to protein downregulation and inhibition of ALL growth, particularly in relapse/refractory B-ALL. Mechanistically, disruption of co-transcriptional splicing by inhibition of CMGC kinases including DYRK1A, or inhibition of CDK9, which phosphorylate the C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II (Pol II), results in alteration of SF3B1 and Pol II association. Disruption of SF3B1 and transcriptional elongation complex alters Pol II pausing, which promotes the inclusion of a poison exon in RBM39. Moreover, RBM39 ablation suppresses the growth of human B-ALL, and targeting RBM39 with sulfonamides, which degrade RBM39 protein, showed strong anti-tumor activity in preclinical models. Our data reveal that relapse/refractory B-ALL is susceptible to pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of RBM39 and provide two potential strategies to target this axis.
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