Aberrant splicing of MBD1 reshapes the epigenome to drive convergent myeloerythroid defects in MDS
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Myelodysplastic neoplasms (MDS) feature hematopoietic deficits driven in part by transcript splicing abnormalities. Thus far, such disease-driving transcripts have been identified in association with specific splicing factor mutations. However, it remains unclear whether there also exists a set of disease-wide conserved pathological transcripts, which drive MDS independently of mutational status. Here, we characterize an MDS-associated long isoform of MBD1 (MBD1-L) as the first described member of this class of transcripts. Overexpression of MBD1-L in healthy human HSPCs recapitulates archetypal defects of MDS including deficits in erythroid differentiation and reconstitution capacity. These defects arise from an isoform-specific switching of MBD1’s binding behavior, refocusing its heterochromatin-promoting activity from methylated to unmethylated CpGs and enacting broad downregulation of CpG-rich promoters as well as secondary epigenetic effects mediated by its downstream target BCOR . Remarkably, we also find that directly reversing abnormal MBD1 splicing in primary human MDS using nanoparticle-encapsulated ASOs enhances erythroid differentiation.
Key points
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Global mis-splicing of MBD1 represents a novel gain-of-function epigenetic axis driving erythropoietic and proliferative defects in MDS.
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ASO based depletion of pathogenic MBD1 transcripts restores erythroid differentiation, advancing RNA-based therapies for MDS.