ARHGEF12 regulates erythropoiesis and is involved in erythroid regeneration after chemotherapy in acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients

Hematopoiesis is a finely regulated process in vertebrates under both homeostatic and stress conditions. By whole exome sequencing, we studied the genomics of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients who needed multiple red blood cell (RBC) transfusions after intensive chemotherapy treatment. , e...

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Published inHaematologica (Roma) Vol. 105; no. 4; pp. 925 - 936
Main Authors Xie, Yangyang, Gao, Li, Xu, Chunhui, Chu, Liming, Gao, Lei, Wu, Ruichi, Liu, Yu, Liu, Ting, Sun, Xiao-jian, Ren, Ruibao, Tang, Jingyan, Zheng, Yi, Zhou, Yong, Shen, Shuhong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Italy Ferrata Storti Foundation 01.04.2020
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Summary:Hematopoiesis is a finely regulated process in vertebrates under both homeostatic and stress conditions. By whole exome sequencing, we studied the genomics of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients who needed multiple red blood cell (RBC) transfusions after intensive chemotherapy treatment. , encoding a RhoA guanine nucleotide exchange factor, was found to be associated with chemotherapy-induced anemia by genome-wide association study analyses. A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) of located in an intron predicted to be a GATA1 binding site, rs10892563, is significantly associated with patients who need RBC transfusion ( =3.469E-03, odds ratio 5.864). A luciferase reporter assay revealed that this SNP impairs GATA1-mediated trans-regulation of , and quantitative polymerase chain reaction studies confirmed that the homozygotes status is associated with an approximately 61% reduction in expression ( =0.0088). Consequently, erythropoiesis was affected at the pro-erythroblast phases. The role of and its homologs in erythroid differentiation was confirmed in human K562 cells, mouse 32D cells and primary murine bone marrow cells. We further demonstrated in zebrafish by morpholino-mediated knockdown and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of that its reduction resulted in erythropoiesis defects. The p38 kinase pathway was affected by the ARHGEF12-RhoA signaling in K562 cells, and consistently, the Arhgef12-RhoA-p38 pathway was also shown to be important for erythroid differentiation in zebrafish as active RhoA or p38 readily rescued the impaired erythropoiesis caused by knockdown. Finally, ARHGEF12-mediated p38 activity also appeared to be involved in phenotypes of patients of the rs10892563 homozygous genotype. Our findings present a novel SNP of that may involve ARHGEF12-RhoA-p38 signaling in erythroid regeneration in ALL patients after chemotherapy.
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YX and LG contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:0390-6078
1592-8721
1592-8721
DOI:10.3324/haematol.2018.210286