Cell Reports (Mar 2020)

ABCA1 Exerts Tumor-Suppressor Function in Myeloproliferative Neoplasms

  • Manon Viaud,
  • Omar Abdel-Wahab,
  • Julie Gall,
  • Stoyan Ivanov,
  • Rodolphe Guinamard,
  • Sophie Sore,
  • Johanna Merlin,
  • Marion Ayrault,
  • Emma Guilbaud,
  • Arnaud Jacquel,
  • Patrick Auberger,
  • Nan Wang,
  • Ross L. Levine,
  • Alan R. Tall,
  • Laurent Yvan-Charvet

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 10
pp. 3397 – 3410.e5

Abstract

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Summary: Defective cholesterol efflux pathways in mice promote the expansion of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells and a bias toward the myeloid lineage, as observed in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). Here, we identify 5 somatic missense mutations in ABCA1 in 26 patients with CMML. These mutations confer a proliferative advantage to monocytic leukemia cell lines in vitro. In vivo inactivation of ABCA1 or expression of ABCA1 mutants in hematopoietic cells in the setting of Tet2 loss demonstrates a myelosuppressive function of ABCA1. Mechanistically, ABCA1 mutations impair the tumor-suppressor functions of WT ABCA1 in myeloproliferative neoplasms by increasing the IL-3Rβ signaling via MAPK and JAK2 and subsequent metabolic reprogramming. Overexpression of a human apolipoprotein A-1 transgene dampens myeloproliferation. These findings identify somatic mutations in ABCA1 that subvert its anti-proliferative and cholesterol efflux functions and permit the progression of myeloid neoplasms. Therapeutic increases in HDL bypass these defects and restore normal hematopoiesis. : Viaud et al. show that ABCA1 mutants identified in CMML patients diminish the tumor-suppressor functions of ABCA1 and cooperate with Tet2 loss to confer the hypersensitivity of myeloid progenitors to IL-3 receptor β canonical signaling, which can be prevented by raising HDL levels. Keywords: somatic mutations, leukemia biology, ATP-binding cassette transporter, cholesterol efflux, hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells, ten-eleven translocation 2