Genna Luciani – gennaluciani@gmail.com
Lea Melin – l.f.melin@gmail.com
Takis Prinos – takis.prinos@utoronto.ca
Mandeep Mann – mandeep.mann@ utoronto.ca
Rachel Harding – rachel.harding@utoronto.ca
Preprint Article Reviewed: 
Title: Small-molecule targeting of MUSASHI RNA-binding activity in acute myeloid leukemia.
Authors: Gerard Minuesa, Steven K Albanese, Arthur Chow, Alexandra Schurer, Sun-Mi Park, Christina Z. Rotsides, James Taggart, Andrea Rizzi, Levi N. Naden, Timothy Chou, Saroj Gourkanti, Daniel Cappel, Maria C Passarelli, Lauren Fairchild, Carolina Adura, Fraser J Glickman, Jessica Schulman, Christopher Famulare, Minal Patel, Joseph K Eibl, Gregory M Ross, Derek S Tan, Christina S Leslie, Thijs Beuming, Yehuda Goldgur, John D Chodera, Michael G Kharas
Date of submission to bioRxiv: May 14, 2018
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Dear Authors, Thank you for posting your manuscript titled Small-molecule targeting of MUSASHI RNA-binding activity in acute myeloid leukemia as a preprint on bioRxiv! We reviewed this work at our journal club at the Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Toronto. Compiled comments from the attendants are below. To structure the feedback, we used the quick worksheet guidelines published on PREreview. We hope this feedback will be useful to improve the manuscript.
What is the main question the study attempts to answer?
What is (are) the hypothesis?
Small molecule antagonism of the RNA binding domain of MSI2 has therapeutic potential in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. Ro-08-2750 binds at an RNA-interacting site and competitively inhibits RNA binding of MSI2.
What techniques/analyses do the researchers adopt to test their hypothesis(es)?
The authors use biophysical assays, computational structural biology, cell biology techniques, and an animal model. These methods are all common to preclinical drug development and are appropriate to address the outlined hypothesis and in most cases adequately address the question being asked.
Why is this study relevant?
Understanding of RNA biology and its importance in human health has expanded greatly in recent years. While proteins with RNA binding domains have been implicated in disease, they are typically thought of as “undruggable” as they often lack defined pockets. MSI2 overexpression is common in AML patients with poor clinical prognosis. This study highlights that (1) RRM domains can be targeted by a small molecule antagonist and (2) that this approach may have therapeutic value in the treatment of AML.
Write here any general comments you might have about the research approach.
Structural studies
Biophysical Assays
Cell Biology
Write here any specific comment you might have about experimental approaches and methods used in the study.
Structural studies
Write here any specific comment/note about figures in the paper (this could be related to the way data are displayed and your ability to understand the results just by looking at the figures).
Write here any additional comment you might have (this includes minor concerns such as typos and structure of the manuscript).