# Molecular and Cellular Regulation of Pre-Leukemic Stem Cells and their Therapeutic Targeting

> **NIH NIH R35** · ALBERT EINSTEIN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE · 2021 · $776,201

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
Clinical outcome in MDS and AML has not significantly improved over the past 50 years and cure rates remain
below 15% in the majority of patients (~85%) which are >55 years of age. Fundamentally novel approaches are
urgently needed to improve our understanding of disease pathogenesis and to enable more effective therapeutic
intervention. Evidence over the past 10 years has shown that MDS and AML arise from preleukemic stem cells
(preL-SC), preceding the formation of fully transformed leukemia stem cells (LSC). Recent work has uncovered
considerable subclonal heterogeneity of preL-SC in MDS and AML and has indicated that stem cell subclonal
complexity plays a key role in pathogenesis, progression, and therapeutic resistance. However, the molecular
and cellular mechanisms governing these processes are still largely unknown. Transcription factors (TF) have
long been recognized as critical regulators of normal and malignant hematopoiesis. Specifically, in MDS and
AML transcriptional dysregulation is key to confer the pathognomonic features of cellular dysplasia and a myeloid
differentiation block. Cell fate and differentiation decisions as well as the induction of a myeloid bias at the stem
cell and multipotent progenitor level, which is one of the earliest cellular properties detected in preL-SC, are
governed by transcription factors. In addition, our recent work has discovered an unexpected degree of
transcription dynamics and plasticity in hematopoietic stem and progenitors, and that both transcriptional
plasticity and transcriptional memory are dysregulated in preL-SC and LSC. Our major research questions/goals
are to understand stem cell subclonal dynamics and their regulation in the initiation and progression of MDS and
AML, to identify and study mechanisms of transcriptional cooperativity in pre-leukemic stem cells and their
therapeutic targeting, and to study transcription dynamics and pre-LSC fate dysregulation at a single-cell and
single-molecule resolution. To accomplish these goals we will utilize novel tools for stem cell subclonal analysis
in patients, as well as newly developed longitudinal mouse genetic models of preL-SC progression to MDS and
AML. In addition, we will leverage recent advances in our ability to directly target key transcription factors by
novel first-in-class pharmacological inhibitors, as well as novel experimental tools for the study of transcription
dynamics at a single-molecule level in primary stem/progenitor cells from murine models and patients. Overall,
our research will delineate the molecular regulation of pre-cancerous cell states in MDS and AML pathogenesis.
This will enable their therapeutic targeting, in addition to the elimination of the fully-transformed leukemic clones.
Such an approach holds the promise of achieving lasting remissions and potentially cure of MDS and AML. Our
long-term vision is that, once we understand the early transformation-initiating mechanisms in pre-cancerous
stem cell...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10299704
- **Project number:** 1R35CA253127-01A1
- **Recipient organization:** ALBERT EINSTEIN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
- **Principal Investigator:** Ulrich Steidl
- **Activity code:** R35 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $776,201
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2021-09-01 → 2028-08-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10299704

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10299704, Molecular and Cellular Regulation of Pre-Leukemic Stem Cells and their Therapeutic Targeting (1R35CA253127-01A1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10299704. Licensed CC0.

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