Abstract
Chromosomal rearrangements involving the Mixed Lineage Leukemia gene (MLL1, KMT2A) are defining a genetically distinct subset in about 10% of human acute leukemias. Translocations involving the KMT2A-locus at chromosome 11q23 are resulting in the formation of a chimeric oncogene, where the N-terminal part of KMT2A is fused to a variety of translocation partners. The most frequently found fusion partners of KMT2A in acute leukemia are the C-terminal parts of AFF1, MLLT3, MLLT1 and MLLT10. Unfortunately, the presence of an KMT2A-rearrangements is associated with adverse outcomes in leukemia patients. Moreover, non-rearranged KMT2A-complexes have been demonstrated to be crucial for disease development and maintenance in NPM1-mutated and NUP98-rearranged leukemia, expanding the spectrum of genetic disease subtypes that are dependent on KMT2A. Recent advances in the development of targeted therapy strategies to disrupt the function of KMT2A-complexes in leukemia have led to the establishment of Menin-KMT2A interaction inhibitors that effectively eradicate leukemia in preclinical model systems and show favorable tolerability and significant efficacy in early-phase clinical trials. Indeed, one Menin inhibitor, Revumenib, was recently approved for the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory KMT2A-rearranged acute leukemia. However, single agent therapy can lead to resistance. In this Review article we summarize our current understanding about the biology of pathogenic KMT2A-complex function in cancer, specifically leukemia, and give a systematic overview of lessons learned from recent clinical and preclinical studies using Menin inhibitors.