The mouse double minute 4 (MDM4) negatively regulates p53 through the p53/MDM2/MDM4 regulatory network and is commonly overexpressed in several cancers. Here, we describe two unrelated pedigrees with germline MDM4 mutations with clinical features of bone marrow (BM) failure. Patient 1 (P1) presented at the age of 11 months with chronic pure red cell aplasia requiring chronic red blood cell transfusions and BM findings with absent erythroid precursors and dysplastic megakaryocytes. Patient 2 (P2) presented at age of 4 weeks with neutropenia with hypogranulation of neutrophils and a normocellular bone marrow with hypoplastic myelopoiesis and dysplasia of all three lineages. Both patients had normal chromosomal breakage and normal for age telomere length in peripheral blood. Whole genome and panel sequencing identified germline heterozygous variants in MDM4: p.Leu31Thrfs*15 in P1 and p.T454M in P2 as the only relevant candidate variants. Both mutations are absent in >140 thousand individuals in gnomAD database, and the constraint analysis indicates that MDM4 gene is intolerant to missense variation (observed to expected (O/E) ratio of 181/258, Z-score 1.71) and highly intolerant to protein truncating variation (O/E: 0/27 with a pLI score of 1).

MDM4 protein consists of four key domains: p53 binding N-terminus, an acidic region, a zinc finger domain, and a C-terminal RING domain, which heterodimerizes with MDM2 to ubiquitinate and promote p53 degradation. MDM4 p.T454M missense mutation found in P2 was previously reported by Toufektchan et al. in 2020 in one patient with BM failure phenotype with short telomeres who carried additional TERT variant. The MDM4 p.T454M mutation was shown to result in lower protein levels (consistent with a loss-of-function effect) and had altered capacity to dimerize with the MDM2 RING domain, causing p53 hyperactivity. MDM4 p.Leu31Thrfs*15 mutation described in P1 is localized in the N-terminal p53 binding domain and results in RNA transcript loss, as confirmed by us in patient cells using RNA sequencing showing a two-fold reduction of the dominant transcript [ENST00000367182.8]. This was corroborated by Western blot demonstrating decreased levels of MDM4 protein. We sought to elucidate the impact of p.Leu31Thrfs*15 and p.T454M mutations on hematopoiesis and regulation of p53 expression. In two human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines derived from male and female healthy donors, we knocked-in the MDM4 p.T454M and p.Leu31Thrfs*15 mutations by CRISPR/Cas9 engineering. Of note, MDM4 p.Leu31Thrfs*15 homozygous knock-in line could not be established despite multiple attempts. We discovered statistically significant decreased erythroid and myeloid differentiation capacity from MDM4-mutant iPSCs compared to isogenic control iPSCs (p <0.05). There were statistically significantly more AnnexinV+/DAPI+ mutant iPSC-derived myeloid and erythroid progenitors compared to isogenic control-derived progenitors (p <0.05), pointing to a higher rate of cell death in MDM4-mutant cells. We further demonstrated increased expression of p53 and p21 proteins in MDM4 p.Leu31Thrfs*15 iPSC clones. To better understand the loss-of-function effect of MDM4, we knocked out MDM4 in healthy CD34+ cells using CRISPR/Cas9 editing. Knock out of MDM4 with an efficiency of >80% was achieved in multiple biological replicates, resulting in increased p53 activity and fewer blast-forming erythroid (BFU-E) and myeloid colonies compared to control cells that were Cas9-edited at the AAVS1 safe harbor locus. This impairment was rescued by disruption of TP53 gene. Sequencing of individual BFU-E colonies did not reveal any cells with biallelic loss of MDM4, while similar percentages of unedited colonies and heterozygous disrupted MDM4 colonies were detected. Xenotransplantation studies using immunodeficient NBSGW mice are currently underway to explore the impact of MDM4-edited CD34+ cells in vivo. In summary, we describe two patients with germline loss-of-function MDM4 mutations that cause p53 hyperactivity which causes the unifying feature of hematopoietic defect across a BMF disorder spectrum without telomere shortening.

Sharma and Bhoopalan are equal contributors

Erlacher:Gilead Sciences: Research Funding.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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