Waclawiczek A, Leppä AM, Renders S, Bergerweiss I, Stumpf K, Betz B, Gabrowski S, Huang FY, Lalioti ME, Hempel B, Sohn M, Kuusanmäki H, Thiel V, Unglaub JM, Shahswar R, Richter S, Janssen M, Karpova D, Donato E, Bonig H, Röllig C, Raffel S, Heuser M, Hundemer M, Kontro M, Eisfeld AK, Sauer T, Cabezas-Wallscheid N, Müller-Tidow C, Trumpp A.

 

 

Cell Stem Cell. 2026 Jun 4;33(6):982-999.e8.

The BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax has transformed the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), but relapse due to resistance of leukemic stem cells (LSCs) remains a major challenge. By molecular and functional profiling of LSCs from >150 patients, we identify four LSC subtypes. These mirror distinct hematopoietic lineage stages, which determine the expression ratio between the venetoclax target BCL-2 and resistance-inducing proteins MCL-1 and BCL-xL (MAC-score). Longitudinal analyses reveal that venetoclax resistance mostly arises in LSCs through plasticity toward a megakaryocytic/erythroid-progenitor (MEP)-LSC state that switches survival dependency from BCL-2 to BCL-xL. In rare cases, mature monocytic/dendritic (MoDe)-LSCs, found within LAMP5+ monocytic AMLs, drive venetoclax resistance. LSC subtyping improves genetic risk stratification and provides subtype-specific therapies: venetoclax-resistant MEP-LSCs respond to BCL-xL inhibitors, whereas MoDe-LSCs are sensitive to MEK1/2 inhibition. Our findings reveal four distinct LSC types with unique vulnerabilities and propose biomarker-guided treatment strategies that complement genetic profiling to overcome venetoclax resistance.

Esther Rodríguez-CorreaFlorian GrünschlägerTamar NizharadzeNatasha AnsteeJude Al-SabahVojtech KumpostAnastasia SedlmeierCongxin LiMelanie BallFoteini FotopoulouJeyan JayarajanIan GhezziJulia KnochMegan DruceKleo AurichMarleen Büchler-SchäffSusanne LuxPablo Hernández-MalmiercaJulius GräselDominik VonfichtMarta López-OsiasElvira González-SaizDaniel Fernández-PérezAnna MathioudakiJudith ZauggAlejo Rodríguez-FraticelliRalf MikutAndreas TrumppThomas HöferDaniel HübschmannSimon HaasMichael D Milsom

Nature Cell Biology, 2026 May 25 doi: 10.1038/s41556-026-01958-0

 Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) display extensive molecular and functional heterogeneity. However, a cohesive model that explains the relationship and biological relevance of these diverse HSC states remains elusive. Here, by performing single-cell transplantations of over 1,000 highly purified murine long-term HSCs combined with in-depth phenotyping of their clonal progeny, we define kinetics-based reconstitution parameters which aligned HSCs into a single hierarchical trajectory reflective of functional potency. This approach revealed that previously identified lineage biases are actually transitory states along this linear trajectory, not a discrete stable condition. Single-cell secondary transplantations validated hierarchical ordering based on reconstitution kinetics, whereas mathematical modelling combined with experimental modulation of lineage-biased blood production revealed that apparent lineage-biased outputs actually arise from cell-extrinsic feedback regulation and clonal competition between slow- and fast-engrafting clones to fill mature lineages to their compartment size limit. This study reconciles multiple layers of HSC heterogeneity into a unifying framework.

Characterization of single neurons reprogrammed by pancreatic cancer.

Thiel V, Renders S, Panten J, Dross N, Bauer K, Azorin D, Henriques V, Vogel V, Klein C, Leppä AM, Barriuso Ortega I, Schwickert J, Ourailidis I, Mochayedi J, Mallm JP, Müller-Tidow C, Monyer H, Neoptolemos J, Hackert T, Stegle O, Odom DT, Offringa R, Stenzinger A, Winkler F, Sprick M, Trumpp A. Nature. 2025 Apr;640(8060):1042-1051.
 
 
 
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