作者
Peng-Cheng Yu,Dan Hou,Binhe Chang,Na Liu,Chunhui Xu,Xinchi Chen,Cheng-Long Hu,Ting Liu,Xiaoning Wang,Qunling Zhang,Ping Liu,Yi-Lun Jiang,Ming-Yue Fei,Li-Juan Zong,Jiaying Zhang,Hui Liu,Bingyi Chen,Shu-Bei Chen,Yong Wang,Zi-Juan Li,Xiya Li,Chuhan Deng,Yi-Yi Ren,Muying Zhao,Shiyu Jiang,Roujia Wang,Jiacheng Jin,Shaoxin Yang,Kai Xue,Jun Shi,Chunkang Chang,Shuhong Shen,Zhikai Wang,Pengcheng He,Zhu Chen,Sai‐Juan Chen,Xiao‐Jian Sun,Lan Wang
摘要
A significant variation in chromatin accessibility is an epigenetic feature of leukemia. The cause of this variation in leukemia, however, remains elusive. Here, we identify SMARCA5, a core ATPase of the imitation switch (ISWI) chromatin remodeling complex, as being responsible for aberrant chromatin accessibility in leukemia cells. We find that SMARCA5 is required to maintain aberrant chromatin accessibility for leukemogenesis and then promotes transcriptional activation of AKR1B1, an aldo/keto reductase, by recruiting transcription co-activator DDX5 and transcription factor SP1. Higher levels of AKR1B1 are associated with a poor prognosis in leukemia patients and promote leukemogenesis by reprogramming fructose metabolism. Moreover, pharmacological inhibition of AKR1B1 has been shown to have significant therapeutic effects in leukemia mice and leukemia patient cells. Thus, our findings link the aberrant chromatin state mediated by SMARCA5 to AKR1B1-mediated endogenous fructose metabolism reprogramming and shed light on the essential role of AKR1B1 in leukemogenesis, which may provide therapeutic strategies for leukemia.