Diminished AHR signaling drives human acute myeloid leukemia stem cell maintenance

2019 
Eliminating leukemic stem cells (LSCs) is a sought after therapeutic paradigm for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). While repression of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) signaling has been shown to promote short term maintenance of primitive AML cells in culture, no work to date has examined whether altered AHR signaling plays a pathological role in human AML or whether it contributes at all to endogenous LSC function. Here we show AHR signaling is repressed in human AML blasts and preferentially downregulated in LSC-enriched populations within leukemias. A core set of AHR targets are uniquely repressed in LSCs across diverse genetic AML subtypes. In vitro and in vivo administration of the specific AHR agonist FICZ significantly impaired leukemic growth, promoted differentiation and repressed self-renewal. Furthermore, LSCs suppressed a set of FICZ-responsive AHR-target genes that function as tumor suppressors and promoters of differentiation. FICZ stimulation did not impair normal hematopoietic stem and progenitor (HSPC) function, and failed to upregulate a prominent LSC-specific AHR target in HSPCs suggesting that differential mechanisms govern FICZ-induced AHR signaling manifestations in HSCs vs LSCs. Altogether, this work highlights AHR signaling suppression as a key LSC-regulating control mechanism and provides proof of concept in a preclinical model that FICZ-mediated AHR pathway activation enacts unique transcriptional programs in AML that identify it as a novel chemotherapeutic approach to selectively target human LSCs.
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