• Ikaros controls cellular proliferation by repressing genes that regulate cell cycle progression and the PI3K pathway in leukemia.• CK2 inhibitor restores Ikaros tumor suppressor function in high-risk B-ALL with IKZF1 deletion and has a strong therapeutic effect in vivo.Ikaros (IKZF1) is a tumor suppressor that binds DNA and regulates expression of its target genes. The mechanism of Ikaros activity as a tumor suppressor and the regulation of Ikaros function in leukemia are unknown. Here, we demonstrate that Ikaros controls cellular proliferation by repressing expression of genes that promote cell cycle progression and the phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K) pathway. We show that Ikaros function is impaired by the pro-oncogenic casein kinase II (CK2), and that CK2 is overexpressed in leukemia. CK2 inhibition restores Ikaros function as transcriptional repressor of cell cycle and PI3K pathway genes, resulting in an antileukemia effect. In high-risk leukemia where one IKZF1 allele has been deleted, CK2 inhibition restores the transcriptional repressor function of the remaining wild-type IKZF1 allele. CK2 inhibition demonstrated a potent therapeutic effect in a panel of patient-derived primary high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia xenografts as indicated by prolonged survival and a reduction of leukemia burden. We demonstrate the efficacy of a novel therapeutic approach for high-risk leukemia: restoration of Ikaros tumor suppressor activity via inhibition of CK2. These results provide a rationale for the use of CK2 inhibitors in clinical trials for high-risk leukemia, including cases with deletion of one IKZF1 allele. (Blood. 2015;126(15):1813-1822 Introduction Ikaros (IKZF1) activity is essential for normal hematopoiesis and immune development. [1][2][3][4] Ikaros knockout mice have severely impaired hematopoiesis, 5-7 whereas mice with the heterozygous loss of Ikaros develop T-cell leukemia. 8 In humans, impaired Ikaros activity due to the deletion or inactivating mutation of a single IKZF1 allele results in high-risk B-cell leukemia that is resistant to treatment.9-14 Ikaros regulates transcription of target genes via chromatin remodeling. [15][16][17] Ikaros activity is controlled through multiple mechanisms. Mouse studies suggest that the transcription of IKZF1 during normal hematopoiesis is regulated by a complex network. 18 However, Ikaros protein is expressed at high levels in most hematopoietic cells, and posttranslational modifications are hypothesized to play a critical role in regulating Ikaros activity. 19 Several groups have shown that phosphorylation, [19][20][21][22][23][24] sumoylation, 25 and ubiquitination 22 can regulate Ikaros function as a transcriptional repressor. However, the role of posttranslational modification in the regulation of Ikaros tumor suppressor activity in leukemia is unknown.Despite extensive global analyses of Ikaros DNA binding in normal murine hematopoietic cells, 26-28 the molecular mechanisms by which Ikaros exerts its tumor suppressor effects in human leukemia ...
We describe an efficient system for site-selected transposon mutagenesis in maize. A total of 43,776 F1 plants were generated by using Robertson's Mutator (Mu) pollen parents and self-pollinated to establish a library of transposon-mutagenized seed. The frequency of new seed mutants was between 10 ؊4 and 10 ؊5 per F1 plant. As a service to the maize community, maize-targeted mutagenesis selects insertions in genes of interest from this library by using the PCR. Pedigree, knockout, sequence, phenotype, and other information is stored in a powerful interactive database (maize-targeted mutagenesis database) that enables analysis of the entire population and the handling of knockout requests. By inhibiting Mu activity in most F 1 plants, we sought to reduce somatic insertions that may cause false positives selected from pooled tissue. By monitoring the remaining Mu activity in the F 2, however, we demonstrate that seed phenotypes depend on it, and false positives occur in lines that appear to lack it. We conclude that more than half of all mutations arising in this population are suppressed on losing Mu activity. These results have implications for epigenetic models of inbreeding and for functional genomics.
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