Activating mutations of STAT5B and STAT3 in lymphomas derived from γδ-T or NK cells.


Autoria(s): Küçük C.; Jiang B.; Hu X.; Zhang W.; Chan J.K.; Xiao W.; Lack N.; Alkan C.; Williams J.C.; Avery K.N.; Kavak P.; Scuto A.; Sen E.; Gaulard P.; Staudt L.; Iqbal J.; Zhang W.; Cornish A.; Gong Q.; Yang Q.; Sun H.; d'Amore F.; Leppä S.; Liu W.; Fu K.; de Leval L.; McKeithan T.; Chan W.C.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Lymphomas arising from NK or γδ-T cells are very aggressive diseases and little is known regarding their pathogenesis. Here we report frequent activating mutations of STAT3 and STAT5B in NK/T-cell lymphomas (n=51), γδ-T-cell lymphomas (n=43) and their cell lines (n=9) through next generation and/or Sanger sequencing. STAT5B N642H is particularly frequent in all forms of γδ-T-cell lymphomas. STAT3 and STAT5B mutations are associated with increased phosphorylated protein and a growth advantage to transduced cell lines or normal NK cells. Growth-promoting activity of the mutants can be partially inhibited by a JAK1/2 inhibitor. Molecular modelling and surface plasmon resonance measurements of the N642H mutant indicate a marked increase in binding affinity of the phosphotyrosine-Y699 with the mutant histidine. This is associated with the prolonged persistence of the mutant phosphoSTAT5B and marked increase of binding to target sites. Our findings suggest that JAK-STAT pathway inhibition may represent a therapeutic strategy.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_68B017C9B01E

isbn:2041-1723 (Electronic)

pmid:25586472

doi:10.1038/ncomms7025

isiid:000348829800003

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Nature Communications, vol. 6, pp. 6025

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article