Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) constitute a preneoplastic condition in which potentially malignant cancer stem cells continuously
die during differentiation. This MDS-associated cell death often involves caspase-3 activation, yet can also occur without
caspase activation, for instance in differentiating megakaryocytes (MK). We investigated, the mechanisms through which MK
from MDS patients undergo premature cell death. While polyploid, mature MK from healthy subjects or MDS patients manifested
caspase-3 activation during terminal differentiation, freshly isolated, immature MK from MDS died without caspase-3 activation.
Similarly, purified bone marrow CD34
+ cells from MDS patients that were driven into MK differentiation
in vitro died without caspase-3 activation at an immature stage, before polyploidization. The premature death of MDS MK was accompanied
by the mitochondrial release of cytochrome
c, Smac/DIABLO and endonuclease G, a caspase-independent death effector, as well loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential
and plasma membrane phosphatidylserine exposure before definitive loss of viability. Thus, a stereotyped pattern of mitochondrial
alterations accompanies differentiation-associated MK death in MDS.
Keywords Acute myeloid leukemia - Apoptosis - Caspases - Cytochome c
- Endonuclease G
T. Braun and G. Carvalho contributed equally to this paper.