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

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posted on 2025-07-07, 09:40 authored by Ruba Almaghrabi, Yara Alyahyawi, Peter Keane, Syed A Mian, Khadidja Habel, Amelia Atkinson, Carl Ward, Rachel Bayley, Claudia Sargas, Pablo Menendez, George J Murphy, Turki Sobahy, Mohammed A Baghdadi, Arwa F Flemban, Saeed M Kabrah, Raul Torres-Ruiz, Eirini P Papapetrou, Ildem Akerman, Manoj Raghavan, Eva Barragan, Dominique Bonnet, Constanze Bonifer, Paloma Garcia
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.

Funding

Crick (Grant ID: CC2027, Grant title: Bonnet CC2027)

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