Rationale:
Traditional treatments for leukemia fail to address stem cell drug resistance characterized by epigenetic mediators such as histone lysine-specific demethylase 4 (KDM4). The KDM4 family, which acts as epigenetic regulators inducing histone demethylation during the development and progression of leukemia, lacks specific molecular inhibitors.
Methods:
The KDM4 inhibitor, SD49-7, was synthesized and purified based on acyl hydrazone Schiff base. The interaction between SD49-7 and KDM4s was monitored
in vitro
by surface plasma resonance (SPR).
In vitro
and
in vivo
biological function experiments were performed to analyze apoptosis, colony-formation, proliferation, differentiation, and cell cycle in cell sub-lines and mice. Molecular mechanisms were demonstrated by RNA-seq, ChIP-seq, RT-qPCR and Western blotting.
Results:
We found significantly high
KDM4A
expression levels in several human leukemia subtypes. The knockdown of KDM4s inhibited leukemogenesis in the MLL-AF9 leukemia mouse model but did not affect the survival of normal human hematopoietic cells. We identified SD49-7 as a selective KDM4 inhibitor that impaired the progression of leukemia stem cells (LSCs)
in vitro
. SD49-7 suppressed leukemia development in the mouse model and patient-derived xenograft model of leukemia. Depletion of KDM4s activated the apoptosis signaling pathway by suppressing
MDM2
expression
via
modulating H3K9me3 levels on the
MDM2
promoter region.
Conclusion:
Our study demonstrates a unique KDM4 inhibitor for LSCs to overcome the resistance to traditional treatment and offers KDM4 inhibition as a promising strategy for resistant leukemia therapy.