SF3B1 mutations provide genetic vulnerability to copper ionophores in human acute myeloid leukemia | Science Advances
Abstract
In a phenotypical screen of 56 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient samples and using a library of 10,000 compounds, we identified a hit with increased sensitivity toward
SF3B1
-mutated and adverse risk AMLs. Through structure-activity relationship studies, this hit was optimized into a potent, specific, and nongenotoxic molecule called UM4118. We demonstrated that UM4118 acts as a copper ionophore that initiates a mitochondrial-based noncanonical form of cell death known as cuproptosis. CRISPR-Cas9 loss-of-function screen further revealed that iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) deficiency enhances copper-mediated cell death. Specifically, we found that loss of the mitochondrial ISC transporter
ABCB7
is synthetic lethal to UM4118.
ABCB7
is misspliced and down-regulated in
SF3B1
-mutated leukemia, creating a vulnerability to copper ionophores. Accordingly, ABCB7 overexpression partially rescued
SF3B1
-mutated cells to copper overload. Together, our work provides mechanistic insights that link ISC deficiency to cuproptosis, as exemplified by the high sensitivity of
SF3B1
-mutated AMLs. We thus propose
SF3B1
mutations as a biomarker for future copper ionophore–based therapies.