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Showing 1–9 of 9 results
Advanced filters: Author: Megan E. McNerney Clear advanced filters
  • Therapy-related myeloid neoplasms occur as a late complication following chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy administered for a primary condition. In this Review, McNerneyet al. discuss recent studies that have improved our understanding of the aetiology of this disease.

    • Megan E. McNerney
    • Lucy A. Godley
    • Michelle M. Le Beau
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Cancer
    Volume: 17, P: 513-527
  • Cancer can result from mutations in more than one gene and these multiple mutated genes are often functionally dependent on each other; this interaction is known as epistasis. Here, the authors use a combinatorial RNAi screen to identify epistatic genes that are mutated in breast cancer and reveal large numbers of previously unreported gene interactions.

    • Xiaoyue Wang
    • Audrey Q. Fu
    • Kevin P. White
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 5, P: 1-10
  • 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.

    • Jeremy T. Baeten
    • Weihan Liu
    • Megan E. McNerney
    Research
    Leukemia
    Volume: 36, P: 1421-1425
  • Scott Lowe and colleagues investigate regulation of Ras signaling during leukemogenesis and show that negative regulators Spry4 and Nf1 prevent transformation to aggressive acute myeloid leukemia in mice.

    • Zhen Zhao
    • Chi-Chao Chen
    • Scott W Lowe
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 47, P: 539-543