4.8 Article

Splicing factor YBX1 mediates persistence of JAK2-mutated neoplasms

期刊

NATURE
卷 588, 期 7836, 页码 157-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2968-3

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资金

  1. German Research Council (DFG) [HE6233/4-1, HE6233/4-2]
  2. DFG-Collaborative Research Center [CRC854/2]
  3. Thuringian state program ProExzellenz of the Thuringian Ministry for Economics, Science and Digital Society (TMWWDG) [FSU-I-03/14]
  4. Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science
  5. German Research Foundation (DFG/Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize)
  6. DFG [SFB1335, PE-3217/1-1, SFB-TR128-A1]
  7. ERC starting grant [635617]
  8. Deutsche Krebshilfe [70113473]
  9. ERC Consolidator grant [681012 GvHDCure]
  10. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  11. [FOR2033-A03]
  12. [TRR127-A5]
  13. [WA2837/6-1]
  14. [WA2837/7-1]
  15. European Research Council (ERC) [635617] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Inhibition of YBX1, a downstream target of the Janus kinase JAK2, sensitizes myeloproliferative neoplasm cells to JAK and could provide a means to eradicate such cells in human haematopoietic cancers. Janus kinases (JAKs) mediate responses to cytokines, hormones and growth factors in haematopoietic cells(1,2). The JAK gene JAK2 is frequently mutated in the ageing haematopoietic system(3,4) and in haematopoietic cancers(5). JAK2 mutations constitutively activate downstream signalling and are drivers of myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN). In clinical use, JAK inhibitors have mixed effects on the overall disease burden of JAK2-mutated clones(6,7), prompting us to investigate the mechanism underlying disease persistence. Here, by in-depth phosphoproteome profiling, we identify proteins involved in mRNA processing as targets of mutant JAK2. We found that inactivation of YBX1, a post-translationally modified target of JAK2, sensitizes cells that persist despite treatment with JAK inhibitors to apoptosis and results in RNA mis-splicing, enrichment for retained introns and disruption of the transcriptional control of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signalling. In combination with pharmacological JAK inhibition, YBX1 inactivation induces apoptosis in JAK2-dependent mouse and primary human cells, causing regression of the malignant clones in vivo, and inducing molecular remission. This identifies and validates a cell-intrinsic mechanism whereby differential protein phosphorylation causes splicing-dependent alterations of JAK2-ERK signalling and the maintenance of JAK2(V617F) malignant clones. Therapeutic targeting of YBX1-dependent ERK signalling in combination with JAK2 inhibition could thus eradicate cells harbouring mutations in JAK2.

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