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Coordinated missplicing of TMEM14C and ABCB7 causes ring sideroblast formation in SF3B1-mutant myelodysplastic syndrome

Authors :
Robert K. Bradley
Patrick Nugent
Khrystyna North
Jasmine Naru
Eunhee Kim
Janine O. Ilagan
Joseph Pangallo
Sergei Doulatov
Martina Sarchi
Derek L. Stirewalt
Arvind R. Subramaniam
Rochelle Bergantinos
Massiel Chavez Stolla
Omar Abdel-Wahab
Janis L. Abkowitz
Courtnee Clough
Source :
Blood. 139:2038-2049
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2022.

Abstract

SF3B1 splicing factor mutations are near-universally found in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) with ring sideroblasts (RS), a clonal hematopoietic disorder characterized by abnormal erythroid cells with iron-loaded mitochondria. Despite this remarkably strong genotype-to-phenotype correlation, the mechanism by which mutant SF3B1 dysregulates iron metabolism to cause RS remains unclear due to an absence of physiological models of RS formation. Here, we report an induced pluripotent stem cell model of SF3B1-mutant MDS that for the first time recapitulates robust RS formation during in vitro erythroid differentiation. Mutant SF3B1 induces missplicing of ∼100 genes throughout erythroid differentiation, including proposed RS driver genes TMEM14C, PPOX, and ABCB7. All 3 missplicing events reduce protein expression, notably occurring via 5′ UTR alteration, and reduced translation efficiency for TMEM14C. Functional rescue of TMEM14C and ABCB7, but not the non–rate-limiting enzyme PPOX, markedly decreased RS, and their combined rescue nearly abolished RS formation. Our study demonstrates that coordinated missplicing of mitochondrial transporters TMEM14C and ABCB7 by mutant SF3B1 sequesters iron in mitochondria, causing RS formation.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7de86a233058aebc347a23544274b43f