Targeting the METTL1/m7G Axis as a Therapeutic Strategy in Myeloid Leukemia

TitleTargeting the METTL1/m7G Axis as a Therapeutic Strategy in Myeloid Leukemia
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2026
AuthorsRen L., Zhang H., Bobileva O., Nai F., Bi H., Chan A., Baker G.E, Dong L., Guarin D., Hu W., Li W., Leite I., Wang X., Zhang X., Xue M., Wang H., Qin H., Wu X., Ghoda L., Xu L., Zhang B., Li L., Wunderlich M., Mulloy J.C, Jones C.L, O’Leary S.E, Li H., Rosen S.T, Chen C.D, Heisterkamp N., Perry J.JP, Nam Y., Chen J., Caflisch A., Li X., Su R.
JournalBlood
VolumeX
IssueX
Date Published2026 Mar 16
Type of ArticleResearch Article
ISBN Number0006-4971
Abstract

N7-methylguanosine (m7G), a prevalent modification in tRNAs, is primarily catalyzed by the methyltransferase METTL1. While growing evidence supports a role for METTL1 in various tumors, its therapeutic potential and precise function in leukemia stem cell (LSC) homeostasis remain largely unexplored. Here, we identify METTL1 as a key regulator of LSC self-renewal and homing within bone marrow (BM) microenvironment through catalyzing m7G formation on a specific tRNA, tRNAPheGAA, thereby driving leukemogenesis. Mechanistically, METTL1 loss significantly reduces m7G abundance and steady-state levels of tRNAPheGAA, leading to translation suppression and degradation of transcripts enriched with tRNAPheGAA-related codons, such as tyrosine-protein kinase HCK. Decreased HCK expression disrupts CXCR4 signaling, impairing LSC self-renewal and BM homing. Therapeutically, we characterize a small-molecule METTL1 inhibitor (M1i; NSC137443), through high throughput screening. Pharmacological inhibition of METTL1 demonstrates potent anti-tumor efficacy by reduction of tRNA m7G levels and disrupting the tRNAPheGAA/HCK/CXCR4 cascade. Notably, targeting METTL1 significantly reduces LSC frequency, delays leukemogenesis, and prolongs survival in multiple acute myeloid leukemia models. Our findings establish a previously unrecognized role for METTL1 and its target tRNAPheGAA in LSC homeostasis and provide compelling proof-of-concept evidence that METTL1 is a druggable epitranscriptomic target for anti-leukemia therapy.

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006497126006130
DOI10.1182/blood.2025030336
pubindex

0317

Alternate JournalBlood