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MOLECULAR TARGETS FOR THERAPY

CRISPR screening in human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells reveals an enrichment for tumor suppressor genes within chromosome 7 commonly deleted regions

Monosomy 7 and del(7q) are among the most common cytogenetic abnormalities in myeloid malignancies, yet their underlying pathogenesis remains unclear. Using an array-based CRISPR screen and orthogonal machine learning approach, we identify potential chromosome 7 tumor suppressor genes (TSGs). We selected candidate TSGs via datamining of genome-scale studies, individually CRISPR-edited 108 candidates, and measured the subsequent impact on the proliferation and erythroid differentiation of primary, human CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). An unexpected 39% of genes increased proliferation when edited and were significantly enriched in commonly deleted regions. The only two genes that both increased proliferation and decreased erythroid differentiation when edited were the CUX1 transcription factor and ACHE, encoding acetylcholinesterase, both located in the 7q22.1 commonly deleted region. We demonstrate a novel role for ACHE in regulating erythropoiesis through acetylcholine receptor signaling. The defects stemming from loss of ACHE were corrected by a muscarinic receptor inhibitor, implicating muscarinic antagonists as potential treatments for −7/del(7q)-associated anemia. While chromosome-level deletions were historically thought to harbor a single TSG, the significant enrichment of TSGs within commonly deleted regions suggests a contiguous gene syndrome, wherein combinatorial loss of multiple neighboring genes drives disease.

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Fig. 1: Arrayed CRISPR-Cas9 screen and machine learning classification identify multiple chromosome 7 genes with myeloid tumor suppressor activity, concentrated within 7q CDRs.
Fig. 2: CUX1 and ACHE are potential TSGs in the 7q22.1 CDR, and ACHE loss can be rescued by a muscarinic acetylcholine inhibitor.

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Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful for the services and assistance provided by University of Chicago core facilities supported by the Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA014599). In particular, the authors thank William Buikema and the DNA Sequencing and Genotyping Facility Core for special assistance and services (RRID:SCR_019196). We also acknowledge support from the Cytometry and Antibody Technology Core (RRID: SCR_017760) and the Center for Research Informatics Bioinformatics Core.

Funding

This work was funded in part by NIH/NHLBI R01 HL142782, NIH/NCI R01 CA231880, American Cancer Society Research Scholar Award 132457-RSG-18-171-01-LIB, American Society of Hematology Junior Faculty Scholar Award, the Brinson Foundation, and The University of Chicago Cancer Research Foundation Women’s Board. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of Robin and Matthew Patinkin.

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JTB and ICP performed experiments and datamining; WL and SZ performed machine learning analysis; JTB and WL analyzed results and made the figures; JTB, WL, and MEM designed the research and wrote the paper.

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Correspondence to Megan E. McNerney.

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Baeten, J.T., Liu, W., Preddy, I.C. et al. CRISPR screening in human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells reveals an enrichment for tumor suppressor genes within chromosome 7 commonly deleted regions. Leukemia 36, 1421–1425 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-021-01491-z

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