Activating mutations of STAT5B and STAT3 in lymphomas derived from γδ-T or NK cells
Author(s)
Date
2015Source Title
Nature Communications
Print ISSN
20411723
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Volume
6
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
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Abstract
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. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Keywords
histidineJanus kinase 2 inhibitor
Janus kinase inhibitor
mutant protein
phosphotyrosine
STAT5b protein
disease treatment
inhibition
molecular analysis
mutation
parthenogenesis
protein
tumor
Article
binding affinity
binding site
cancer growth
controlled study
gamma delta T lymphocyte
gene mutation
human
human cell
lymphoma cell line
measurement
molecular model
mutator gene
natural killer cell
NK T cell lymphoma
protein phosphorylation
STAT3 gene
STAT5B gene
surface plasmon resonance
T cell lymphoma