Molecular Cancer (Jan 2023)

Harnessing the MYB-dependent TAL1 5’super-enhancer for targeted therapy in T-ALL

  • Charlotte Smith,
  • Aurore Touzart,
  • Mathieu Simonin,
  • Christine Tran-Quang,
  • Guillaume Hypolite,
  • Mehdi Latiri,
  • Guillaume P. Andrieu,
  • Estelle Balducci,
  • Marie-Émilie Dourthe,
  • Ashish Goyal,
  • Françoise Huguet,
  • Arnaud Petit,
  • Norbert Ifrah,
  • André Baruchel,
  • Hervé Dombret,
  • Elizabeth Macintyre,
  • Christoph Plass,
  • Jacques Ghysdael,
  • Nicolas Boissel,
  • Vahid Asnafi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-022-01701-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract The acquisition of genetic abnormalities engendering oncogene dysregulation underpins cancer development. Certain proto-oncogenes possess several dysregulation mechanisms, yet how each mechanism impacts clinical outcome is unclear. Using T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) as an example, we show that patients harboring 5’super-enhancer (5’SE) mutations of the TAL1 oncogene identifies a specific patient subgroup with poor prognosis irrespective of the level of oncogene dysregulation. Remarkably, the MYB dependent oncogenic 5’SE can be targeted using Mebendazole to induce MYB protein degradation and T-ALL cell death. Of note Mebendazole treatment demonstrated efficacy in vivo in T-ALL preclinical models. Our work provides proof of concept that within a specific oncogene driven cancer, the mechanism of oncogene dysregulation rather than the oncogene itself can identify clinically distinct patient subgroups and pave the way for future super-enhancer targeting therapy.

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