4.6 Article

Identification of Oncostatin M as a STAT5-Dependent Mediator of Bone Marrow Remodeling in KIT D816V-Positive Systemic Mastocytosis

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 5, Pages 2344-2356

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2011.01.020

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Funding

  1. Mayor of the City of Vienna
  2. Austrian Society of Laboratory Medicine and Clinical Chemistry
  3. Hans and Blanca Moser Foundation
  4. Fonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung in Osterreich (FWF) [P21173-B13]

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Systemic mastocytosis is a neoplastic disease of mast cells harboring the activating KIT mutation D816V. In most patients, mast cell infiltration in the bone marrow is accompanied by marked microenvironinent alterations, including increased angiogenesis, osteosclerosis, and sometimes fibrosis. Little is known about the mast cell-derived molecules contributing to these bone marrow alterations. We show here that neoplastic mast cells in patients with systemic mastocytosis express oncostatin M (OSM), a profibrogenic and angiogenic modulator. To study the regulation of OSM expression, KIT D816V was inducibly expressed in Ba/F3 cells and was found to up-regulate OSM mRNA and protein levels, suggesting that OSM is a KIT D816V(-)dependent mediator. Correspondingly, KIT D816V(+) HMC-1.2 cells expressed significantly higher amounts of OSM than the KIT D816V(-) HMC-1.1 subclone. RNA interference-induced knockdown of STAT5, a key transcription factor in KIT D816V(+) mast cells, inhibited OSM expression in HMC-1 cells, whereas a constitutively activated STAT5 mutant induced OSM expression. Finally, OSM secreted from KIT D816V(+) mast cells stimulated growth of endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and osteoblasts, suggesting that mast cell-derived OSM may serve as a key modulator of the marrow microenvironinent and thus contribute to the pathology of systemic mastocytosis. (Am J Pathol 2011, 178:2344-2356; DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2011.01.020)

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