Abstract
Recent data suggest that activated STAT5 contributes to growth and differentiation of mast cells (MC) and that STAT5-knock out mice are MC-deficient. We have recently shown that constitutively activated STAT5 acts as a potent oncogenic signaling molecule in hematopoietic progenitor cells (
Cancer Cell 2005;7:87–99
). In the present study, we examined the expression of activated STAT5 in neoplastic MC in systemic mastocytosis (SM) and asked whether the SM-related oncogene c-kit D816V is involved in STAT5-activation. For the immunohistochemical detection of activated tyrosine phosphorylated STAT5 (P-Y-STAT5), we used the specific monoclonal antibody AX1 (Advantex) which does not react with inactive STAT5. In all patients with SM tested (indolent SM, n=11; smouldering SM, n=2; aggressive SM, n=1; mast cell leukemia, n=1; all exhibiting c-kit D816V), MC were found to display P-Y-STAT5. Expression of activated STAT5 was also demonstrable in the c-kit D816V-positive mast cell leukemia-derived cell line HMC-1. The reactivity of HMC-1 cells with AX1 antibody was abrogated by a STAT5-specific blocking-peptide. To define the role of c-kit D816V in STAT5-activation, Ba/F3 cells with doxycycline-inducible expression of c-kit D816V (Ton.kit) were employed. In these cells, induction of c-kit D816V was followed by a massive increase in phosphorylated STAT5 as determined by a specific DNA-binding assay, whereas the total amounts of STAT5-mRNA and of the STAT5-protein showed only a slight increase or remained unchanged. In summary, these data show that neoplastic MC in SM express activated STAT5 (P-Y-STAT5), and that the transforming c-kit mutation D816V leads to persistent activation of STAT5 in these cells.Author notes
Corresponding author
2005, The American Society of Hematology
2005