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Novel oncogenic roles of Mer receptor tyrosine kinase in acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Posted on:2013-09-19Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Colorado Health Sciences CenterCandidate:Migdall-Wilson, Justine ColetteFull Text:PDF
GTID:1454390008990166Subject:Molecular biology
Abstract/Summary:
The Mer receptor tyrosine kinase is ectopically expressed in acute lymphoblastic leukemia and associated with enhanced chemoresistance and disease progression. While such effects are generally ascribed to increased engagement of oncogenic pathways downstream of Mer stimulation by its ligand, Gas6, Mer has not been characterized beyond the scope of its signaling activity. The present study explores Mer behavior following prolonged exposure to Gas6, a context similar to the Gas6-enriched microenvironment of the bone marrow, where a steady supply of ligand facilitates continuous engagement of Mer and likely sustains the presence of leukemic cells. Long-term Gas6 exposure induced production of a partially N-glycosylated form of Mer from newly synthesized stores of protein. Preferential expression of the partial Mer glycoform was associated with diminished levels of Mer on the cell surface and altered Mer localization within the nuclear-soluble and chromatin-bound fractions. The presence of Mer in the nucleus is a novel finding for this receptor, and the glycoform-specific preferences observed in each nuclear compartment suggest that glycosylation may influence Mer function within particular subcellular locales. Further, we found that mutation-induced inhibition of either nuclear Mer localization or its kinase activity impaired baseline clonogenic growth and enhanced chemosensitivity in a human leukemia cell line, similar oncogenic phenotypes that appeared to occur through distinct mechanisms likely related to different Mer functions and localization patterns. Previous studies have established Mer as an attractive cancer biologic target, and understanding the complexity of its activity has important implications for potential strategies of Mer inhibition in leukemia therapy. Our results identify several novel features of Mer that expand the breadth of its functions and impact the development of therapeutic modalities designed to target Mer.
Keywords/Search Tags:Mer receptor tyrosine kinase, Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Oncogenic
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