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Item Critical role of ASCT2-mediated amino acid metabolism in promoting leukaemia development and progression(Springer Nature, 2019-03) Ni, Fang; Yu, Wen-Mei; Li, Zhiguo; Graham, Douglas K.; Jin, Lingtao; Kang, Sumin; Rossi, Michael R.; Li, Shiyong; Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Qu, Cheng-Kui; Microbiology and Immunology, School of MedicineAmino acid (AA) metabolism is involved in diverse cellular functions, including cell survival and growth, however it remains unclear how it regulates normal hematopoiesis versus leukemogenesis. Here, we report that knockout of Slc1a5 (ASCT2), a transporter of neutral AAs, especially glutamine, results in mild to moderate defects in bone marrow and mature blood cell development under steady state conditions. In contrast, constitutive or induced deletion of Slc1a5 decreases leukemia initiation and maintenance driven by the oncogene MLL-AF9 or Pten deficiency. Survival of leukemic mice is prolonged following Slc1a5 deletion, and pharmacological inhibition of ASCT2 also decreases leukemia development and progression in xenograft models of human acute myeloid leukemia. Mechanistically, loss of ASCT2 generates a global effect on cellular metabolism, disrupts leucine influx and mTOR signaling, and induces apoptosis in leukemic cells. Given the substantial difference in reliance on ASCT2-mediated AA metabolism between normal and malignant blood cells, this in vivo study suggests ASCT2 as a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of leukemia.Item Retraction Note: REST regulates the cell cycle for cardiac development and regeneration(Springer Nature, 2024-02-22) Zhang, Donghong; Wang, Yidong; Lu, Pengfei; Wang, Ping; Yuan, Xinchun; Yan, Jianyun; Cai, Chenleng; Chang, Ching-Pin; Zheng, Deyou; Wu, Bingruo; Zhou, Bin; Medicine, School of MedicineRetraction to: Nature Communications 10.1038/s41467-017-02210-y, published online 07 December 2017 The authors have retracted this article because of significant concerns regarding a number of figures presented in this work that question the integrity of the data. After publication, several concerns were raised about the figures in this article. Specifically, * There appears to be a partial overlap between two panels of Figure 4e (bottom left corner for p21KO and top right for DKO). * There appears to be an overlap between a control panel from figure 2k and Rest imKO in Figure 5g (PH3 staining). * There appears to be image reuse between two samples in Figure 5g in the Aurora B staining row for Rest imKO and p21KO. * There appears to be an overlap between Figure 6f Ph3 staining for the Rest cDNA sample and Supplementary Fig. 6e, EdU staining, Rest cDNA, with fewer arrows and less visible DAPI staining. All authors agree with this retraction.