Abstract
In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), mutational activation of the receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) Flt3 is frequently involved in leukemic transformation. However, little is known about a possible role of highly expressed wild-type Flt3 in AML. The proto-oncogene c-Cbl is an important regulator of RTK signaling, acting through its ubiquitin ligase activity and as a platform for several signaling adaptor molecules. Here, we analyzed the role of c-Cbl in Flt3 signal transduction and myeloid transformation. C-Cbl physically interacted with Flt3 and was tyrosine phosphorylated in the presence of Flt3-ligand (FL). Overexpression of a dominant-negative form of c-Cbl (Cbl-70Z) inhibited FL-induced Flt3 ubiquitylation and internalization, indicating involvement of c-Cbl in Flt3 signaling. DNA sequencing of AML bone marrow revealed a case with a c-Cbl point mutation (Cbl-R420Q). Cbl-R420Q inhibited Flt3 internalization and ubiquitylation. Coexpression of Cbl-R420Q or Cbl-70Z with Flt3 induced cytokine-independent growth and survival of 32Dcl3 cells in the absence of FL. Also, the mutant Cbl proteins altered the amplitude and duration of Flt3-dependent signaling events. Our results indicate an important role of Cbl proteins in Flt3 signal modulation. Also, the data suggest a novel mechanism of leukemic transformation in AML by mutational inactivation of negative RTK regulators.
Introduction
Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) bind extracellular growth factors and activate intracellular signaling networks. The magnitude and kinetics of RTKs activation are tightly regulated, since they determine the quality and extent of the biologic response.1 Attenuation of RTK signaling occurs by endocytosis and subsequent protein degradation.2-4 Cbl proteins have been shown to be central players in these processes.5-7 The members of the Cbl family, c-Cbl, Cbl-b, and Cbl-3, contain an N-terminal phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain that allows direct interaction with activated RTKs, and a RING finger domain that classifies Cbl proteins as E3 ubiquitin ligases.5,8-10 Ubiquitylation of RTKs is important for their internalization, endocytic sorting, and targeting for degradation.2 In addition to their ubiquitin E3 ligase activity, Cbl proteins also associate with the endocytic machinery via their C-terminus by recruiting proteins such as CIN85 and endophilins.11,12 However, not only are Cbl proteins important for RTK signal termination, but they also mediate positive RTK signaling events to downstream effectors. Upon phosphorylation, Cbl molecules bind signaling molecules including SHP-2, Gab2, and PI3-kinase.13 In animal models, but not in human cancers, oncogenic forms of Cbl have been described that are characterized by loss of the E3 ubiquitin ligase activity.14,15 It has been reported that these oncogenic mutants of Cbl interact with activated RTKs and function in a dominant-negative fashion.16,17
Aberrant signaling by the type III RTK Flt3 is an important event in the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Flt3 strongly influences hematopoietic progenitor cell homeostasis and is highly expressed in AML.18-21 Also, about one third of AML cases harbor somatic, activating Flt3 mutations that cause myeloid transformation.21-24 In contrast to activating mutations, little is known about the potential functions of Flt3 in AML cases lacking Flt3 mutations. Also, the mechanisms of Flt3 signal regulation and the role of Cbl proteins in these processes remain undetermined, although it has been shown that Flt3 activation is followed by Cbl phosphorylation.25
Here, we analyzed the role of c-Cbl in the internalization, ubiquitylation, and biologic functions of wild-type Flt3 (Flt3-WT) and the most commonly described Flt3 mutations in AML, internal tandem duplication (Flt3-ITD). We found that the inhibition of Cbl function severely disturbed Flt3 signal transduction kinetics by blocking Flt3 internalization and ubiquitylation. As a consequence, interference with Cbl function induced ligand-independent, autoactive biologic effects of Flt3. Also, we describe a novel E3-ligase inactivating c-Cbl mutation isolated from the blasts of one AML patient. This mutant Cbl protein interfered with the function of endogenous c-Cbl and displayed in vitro transforming activity in myeloid cells that was dependent on the presence of Flt3. To our knowledge, this represents the first case of a transforming Cbl mutation in a human cancer specimen, pointing toward a novel mechanism of disturbed RTK signal termination in human cancers that could be amenable to pharmacological kinase inhibition.
Materials and methods
Reagents and antibodies
Recombinant human Flt3 ligand (FL) and recombinant murine IL-3 were purchased from PeproTech (Rocky Hill, NJ). EGF and PDGF ([125I]-labeled and unlabeled) were purchased from GE Healthcare (Munich, Germany). Polyclonal rabbit antiphospho-Erk-1/2 and antiphospho-Akt antibodies were obtained from Cell Signaling Technology (Beverly, MA). The antibodies for GST, Flt3, HA-tag, and signal transducer and activator of transcription 5a/b (anti-STAT5a/b) were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). The mouse monoclonal anti–c-Cbl antibody was obtained from BD Biosciences (San Jose, CA). Antibodies for anti–Erk-1/2, antiphosphotyrosine (4G10), and anti–phospho-STAT5a/b were purchased from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY). The mouse monoclonal antiactin antibody was purchased from Sigma (Taufkirchen, Germany). Purified antihuman Flt3 antibody (clone SF1.340) was purchased from Beckman Coulter (Fullerton, CA). Phycoerythrin (PE)–labeled monoclonal mouse antihuman Flt3 antibodies as well as appropriate isotype controls were obtained from PharMingen (San Diego, CA). The Flt3-specific inhibitor SU11248 was a kind gift from Sugen (San Francisco, CA). Cycloheximide was purchased from Sigma.
Cell lines
The IL-3–dependent murine myeloid cell line 32Dcl3 (subsequently referred to as 32D) was kindly provided by Dr Felicitas Rosenthal (Freiburg, Germany) and was cultured as described.23,26 COS-7 and 293T cells were cultured in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (Invitrogen, Karlsruhe, Germany). Cells were maintained in a humidified incubator at 37°C and 5% CO2.
Generation of stable cell lines
The generation of 32D cells stably expressing wild-type Flt3 or Flt3-ITD has been previously described.23,24 For generating Cbl-overexpressing 32D cell lines, parental 32D or 32D cells stably expressing Flt3 receptors were electroporated with different Cbl constructs (c-Cbl-WT, Cbl-70Z, Cbl-R420Q), as described.23 The stable Cbl-expressing bulk cultures were selected using neomycin (800 μg/mL). To avoid possible clonal selection, for each cell line, at least 2 bulk cultures were generated. All cell lines were generated and maintained in medium supplemented with WEHI-conditioned medium as source of IL-3 until being used for the experiments.
Transient transfections
For transient expression experiments, COS-7 cells were transfected using SuperFect (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer's protocol. At 48 hours after transfection, cells were lysed and analyzed for expression of indicated proteins.
Patient samples
The patient samples were collected from patients enrolled in a treatment optimization trial in Germany.27 Control total bone marrow samples were obtained from healthy donors. Written informed consent was obtained from all individuals in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. The use of human material for scientific purposes was approved by the ethics committees of the Medical Faculty of Münster University, Goethe University Medical School, and the Technical University of Munich.
RNA isolation, cDNA preparation, and sequencing
RNA was isolated from AML blasts using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). A total of 1 μg RNA from each sample was reverse-transcribed using oligo-d(T) primer and Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). DNA generated by reverse-transcription–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was amplified with the sense primer 5′-CCTGGCTACATGGCTTTTTTG-3′ and the antisense primer 5′-GTCAAGTCGTGGTGGCACC-3′, yielding a 708-bp PCR product corresponding to nucleotides 796 to 1503 of the published sequence of human c-Cbl. An ABI PRISM BigDye Terminator kit (Applied Biosystems, Darmstadt, Germany) was used according to the manufacturer's instructions. A standard cycle sequencing protocol with Taq polymerase was performed and analyzed on an automated sequencing system (ABI Prism 3700; Perkin Elmer, Shelton, CT). For direct sequencing of the PCR products, the PCR primers were used.
Immunoprecipitations and Western blot analyses
COS-7 or 32D cells transfected with Flt3 and Cbl constructs were washed twice with PBS and starved overnight in medium containing 0.5% FCS and were then stimulated for 10 minutes at 37°C with either 40 ng/mL FL or 1 ng/mL IL-3. Flt3 immunoprecipitations were performed as described.23,26 For the immunoprecipitation of HA-tagged proteins, cell lysates were incubated overnight with an anti-HA antibody conjugated affinity matrix (Roche, Mannheim, Germany). The immunoprecipitates were washed 4 times with lysis buffer, resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and probed with the indicated antibodies overnight at 4°C. Lysate preparation and Western blot analyses were performed as described earlier.23,26
GST pull-down and Far Western assays
293T cells were transfected with the indicated constructs and lysed 48 hours after transfection. For GST pull-down assays, lysates were incubated overnight with equal amounts of either GST alone, GST-Cbl-PTB, or GST-Cbl-PTB-G306E coupled to sepharose beads. The beads were subsequently washed 5 times with lysis buffer and the precipitated proteins were then subsequently resolved by SDS-PAGE. After transfer to a PVDF membrane, the membrane was probed for Flt3 and signals were detected by Western blot.
For Far Western analyses, lysates were resolved by SDS-PAGE and the proteins transferred to PVDF. The membranes were then incubated overnight with TBS buffer (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0) containing 5% BSA and then incubated for 2 hours at room temperature, with purified GST-Cbl-PTB in TBS-T buffer (TBS buffer containing 0.05% Tween-20) containing 2 mM Ca2Cl, at a final concentration of 1 μg/mL. After washing the membrane 3 times with TBS-T buffer, the GST fusion proteins were detected by Western blotting using anti-GST antibodies (Santa Cruz Biotechnology).
Flt3 protein half-life degradation analyses
32D cells expressing the indicated Flt3 proteins were cytokine deprived overnight in medium containing 0.5% FCS. Subsequently, cells were then exposed to 50 μg/mL cycloheximide for 2 hours at 37°C. Cells were then incubated with 100 ng/mL FL at 37°C. The experiment was stopped by cell lysis at the indicated time points. For densitometry, blots were scanned and the bands were quantified using the GelPro Analyser software (INTAS, Göttingen, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Analysis of cell growth
The 32D cells expressing Flt3 or Cbl constructs were washed twice and resuspended in RPMI 1640 with 10% FCS alone or supplemented with the indicated growth factors at a concentration of 2 × 105 cells/mL. Viable cells, determined by trypan blue exclusion, were counted daily until day 4. [3H]-thymidine incorporation assays were performed as described previously.23 Experiments were repeated at least 3 times. Each data point represents the mean plus or minus standard deviation of 3 wells.
Site-directed mutagenesis
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed using the QuickChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, Amsterdam, the Netherlands) according to the manufacturer's instructions. To construct Cbl-R420Q, the point mutation was introduced in the c-Cbl cDNA. For generating kinase-deficient Flt3 (Flt3-K644A), lysine 644 of Flt3-WT was replaced with alanine. Both mutations were confirmed by sequencing.
Internalization assays
A total of 5 × 105 32D cells expressing HA-tagged Flt3 alone or in combination with the indicated Cbl constructs were incubated with FL for the indicated time points. Internalization of the receptor was stopped by quickly placing cells on ice and adding ice-cold PBS containing 0.4% sodium azide. After washing, the cells were incubated with a PE-labeled anti-HA antibody for 30 minutes at 4°C. The mean fluorescence intensity of the stained cells was analyzed by flow cytometry using CellQuest software (BD Biosciences, Palo Alto, CA). For ligand-binding assays of the EGFR and PDGFR, CHO cells were transfected with EGFR or PDGFR and c-Cbl-WT, Cbl-R420Q, or Cbl-70Z or with GFP as a control. After 48 hours, cells were serum deprived for 6 hours and receptor internalization was induced with 50 ng/mL EGF/PDGF for the indicated times. Cells were transferred on ice and washed with PBS plus 0.1% BSA (pH 3.4) to remove surface-bound EGF/PDGF. Receptors remaining at the cell surface were labeled with 1 ng/mL [125I]-EGF or [125I]-PDGF for 1.5 hours. After rigid washing for 5 times, cells were lysed and analyzed in a gamma counter (1470 Wizard; Perkin Elmer). Each time point was measured in triplicate and receptor down-regulation was determined by comparison with the EGFR/PDGFR level on the surface of nonstimulated cells.
In vitro ubiquitylation
293T cells were transfected with HA-tagged Flt3 and lysed as described in “Immunoprecipitations and Western blot analyses.” HA-tagged Flt3 was then immunoprecipitated, extensively washed with lysis buffer, and washed 3 times with ubiquitylation buffer (UB) containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 2.5 mM Mg2Cl, and 1 mM DTT. Immunoprecipitated HA-Flt3 (10 μg) was diluted in UB buffer with 25 μM His-Ub, 100 nM E1 enzyme (Boston Biochem, Cambridge, MA), 500 nM E2 enzyme (Boston Biochem), 4 mM ATP, 2 μg of either purified GST-Cbl-RING, GST-Cbl-70Z-RING, or GST-Cbl-R420Q-RING, in a final volume of 25 μL. The reaction mixture was incubated at 30°C for 4 hours and then analyzed by SDS-PAGE followed by Western blotting.
Results
Cbl associates with and is phosphorylated by Flt3
In order to analyze the effects of Cbl on Flt3 signal mitigation, we generated 32D cell lines that stably overexpressed Flt3 together with c-Cbl or a published dominant-negative version of c-Cbl, Cbl-70Z.15,28 First, we analyzed whether ligand-induced Flt3 activation led to enhanced phosphorylation of c-Cbl. As shown in Figure 1A, Flt3 activation led to marked enhancement of c-Cbl phosphorylation, regardless of activation of Flt3 by mutation or Flt3 ligand (FL), while the dominant-negative c-Cbl mutant was significantly phosphorylated even in the absence of exogenously added FL.
Next, we analyzed whether c-Cbl interacted with Flt3-WT and Flt3-ITD. Western blot analyses of Flt3 immunoprecipitates revealed the physical association of c-Cbl with both receptor types (Figure 1B). Furthermore, immunoprecipitation of exogenously overexpressed, hemagglutinin (HA)–tagged c-Cbl constructs with anti-HA antibodies resulted in immunocomplexes that contained Flt3 (Figure 1C). The association of c-Cbl with Flt3-WT was apparently enhanced by the presence of FL, whereas Cbl-70Z, a dominant-negative form, strongly associated with Flt3 receptors even in the absence of FL.
We then analyzed whether Flt3 could directly interact with c-Cbl in vitro. GST pull-down experiments revealed that the Cbl phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain associated with exogenously overexpressed Flt3 from cellular lysates (Figure 1D). A mutation that is known to interfere with the function of the Cbl-PTB domain (G306E) strongly inhibited its association with Flt3 (Figure 1D). By Far Western blot experiments, we readily detected the association of immunoprecipitated Flt3 separated by SDS-PAGE with purified GST-Cbl-PTB fusion proteins, indicating the direct nature of the interaction (Figure 1E).
These data show that activated Flt3 physically associates with c-Cbl and induces its phosphorylation. Interestingly, Cbl-70Z associated strongly with Flt3 receptors and was significantly phosphorylated in Flt3-WT–expressing cells even in the absence of FL.
Cbl facilitates ubiquitylation of Flt3-WT and Flt3-ITD
Under physiological conditions, activation of RTKs induces receptor internalization and degradation that are important for RTK signal mitigation. Cbl proteins play an important role in these processes.5-7 Thus, we examined whether these mechanisms were intact for constitutively active Flt3-ITD and whether they involved Cbl function. We analyzed the degradation of Flt3-WT and Flt3-ITD in cycloheximide-pretreated cells in the presence or absence of Flt3 ligand (Figure 2A). Previously, it has been shown that Flt3 migrates in SDS-PAGE as 2 bands that differ in their glycosylation pattern.23,26 These bands correspond to an immature intracellular receptor of 130 kDa and the maturely glycosylated receptor of 155 kDa on the cell surface. Recently, it has been shown that intracellular activation of Flt3-ITD in the endoplasmic reticulum delayed exit of the receptor from the ER.29 As shown in Figure 2A, degradation of the mature form of Flt3-ITD protein was slightly enhanced, if compared with wild-type Flt3. However, our results indicate that degradation of the intracellular form of Flt3-ITD, but not of Flt3-WT, occurred slower than degradation of the presumably cell-surface localized receptors (Figure 2A).
Next, we analyzed whether Cbl proteins are involved in Flt3 ubiquitylation (Figure 2B). For this purpose, HA-tagged ubiquitin was coexpressed with Flt3-WT or Flt3-ITD in COS-7 cells. In immunoprecipitates of the Flt3 and upon overexpression of HA-tagged ubiquitin (Ubq), we detected the ubiquitylated form of both Flt3-WT and Flt3-ITD. Ubiquitylation of wild-type Flt3 was increased by FL, while the addition of FL to COS-7 cells that expressed Flt3-ITD did not result in an enhancement of Flt3 ubiquitylation. Importantly, coexpression of the dominant-negative Cbl-70Z almost abolished ubiquitylation of the receptor, suggesting Cbl proteins as the major E3 ubiquitin ligases for Flt3.
Hence, Cbl protein function is necessary for Flt3 ubiquitylation. The degradation kinetics of Flt3-WT and Flt3-ITD are not grossly different. These data suggest that c-Cbl is involved in the degradation of wild-type and mutationally activated Flt3 proteins.
Cbl-70Z induces ligand-independent growth in cooperation with Flt3
Having observed critical importance of Cbl proteins for Flt3 ubiquitylation, we examined whether interference with Cbl function would alter the biologic outcome of Flt3 activation. Therefore, we coexpressed the receptor with Cbl-70Z in 32D cells and analyzed their growth and survival. To exclude clonal evolution of the cultures that may lead to a selection of cells with autoactivated Flt3 receptors, we analyzed bulk cultures instead of single clones. We starved cells from IL-3 that stably expressed different c-Cbl forms and/or Flt3 receptors and assessed the transforming potential of Cbl in the presence or absence of Flt3 by analyzing cellular proliferation and viability. Interestingly, cells coexpressing Flt3-WT and Cbl-70Z rapidly proliferated in the absence of exogenous growth factors. However, in the absence of Cbl-70Z, cells expressing Flt3-WT alone proliferated only in the presence of FL (Figure 3A and data not shown). Cultures expressing only Cbl-70Z (without Flt3 receptors) survived longer after cytokine withdrawal (Figure 3B). However, these cultures failed to proliferate in a cytokine-independent manner and died off after a few days of culture in cytokine-free media (Figure 3A). These findings suggest that Cbl-70Z conferred apoptosis resistance to these cells but was incapable of inducing significant proliferative activity. Interestingly, coexpression of Flt3-WT and Cbl-70Z rescued proliferation, and these cells were able to grow cytokine independently for extended time periods. In contrast, expression of Flt3-WT (in the absence of FL) alone did not lead to proliferation. Finally, we analyzed the effects of Cbl-70Z on cytokine-independent and Flt3-dependent proliferation by directly comparing it with IL-3–dependent proliferation in thymidine incorporation assays (Figure 3C). In the absence of Flt3, Cbl-70Z induced only minimal proliferation (Figure 3C). Coexpression of Cbl-70Z with Flt3-WT induced a robust proliferative response that was further enhanced by Flt3 activation. Importantly, a Flt3-specific inhibitor, SU11248, suppressed proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. Notably, the major effects of Cbl-70Z were again independent from the presence of FL, although they required the presence of the receptor. In contrast to wild-type Flt3, we did not observe any significant synergistic effects of the coexpression of Flt3-ITD with Cbl-70Z, presumably due to full activation of proliferative signals by the constitutively active Flt3-ITD alone (data not shown).
Identification and characterization of a novel Cbl point mutation in AML
The data presented above suggested that interference with Cbl function may be involved in myeloid transformation. In animal models, several oncogenic Cbl mutations have been described, and all are clustered in the RING domain or in the linker region.15,30 Therefore, we analyzed the coding sequences of the corresponding exons in c-Cbl and Cbl-b from the blasts of 150 AML patients by direct cDNA and genomic DNA sequencing. The cDNA and genomic DNA of c-Cbl from one AML patient with a normal karyotype and no Flt3 mutation contained a G to A substitution at position 1259 of the published human c-Cbl sequence that results in the substitution of the charged arginine residue at position 420 with glutamine (R420Q) (Figure 4A). The presence of the mutation was independently verified in the cDNA and the genomic DNA in both directions, using different PCR products and different sequencing primers. Arginine 420 is evolutionary highly conserved and has been suggested to be involved in the contact site of Cbl with the E2 ubiquitin-conjugation enzyme UbcH7.31 We cloned this c-Cbl mutant (Cbl-R420Q) into an expression vector and analyzed its association with Flt3 and the consequences of its presence for Flt3 ubiquitylation and internalization. As shown in Figure 4B, Cbl-R420Q associates with Flt3-WT. Flt3 was readily ubiquitylated after ligand activation in the presence of wild-type c-Cbl, but not in the presence of Cbl-R420Q (Figure 4B-C). In vitro ubiquitylation assays revealed that in contrast to the wild-type RING domain, the RING domain containing the R420Q mutation was unable to function as an E3 ubiquitin ligase for Flt3 (Figure 4D).
RTK signal mitigation has been shown to be dependent on Cbl-mediated receptor internalization and ubiquitylation.5,7,31,32 Therefore, we analyzed the consequences of Cbl-R420Q overexpression for RTK internalization. Interestingly, Cbl-R420Q strongly inhibited ligand-induced internalization of EGFR and PDGFR, a process dependent on intact Cbl function (Figure 4E). Furthermore, Cbl-R420Q inhibited Flt3 internalization to a similar extent as Cbl-70Z.
In conclusion, we have identified a Cbl mutation in primary blasts from an AML patient that effectively inhibits ubiquitylation and internalization of RTKs upon overexpression.
Cbl-R420Q has transforming capacity in the presence of Flt3
We next analyzed the biologic significance of the AML-associated Cbl mutation (Cbl-R420Q) in myeloid cells. Similar to Cbl-70Z, Cbl-R420Q mutant induced proliferation and survival of 32D cells (Figure 5A-C) and induced long-term, cytokine-independent proliferation of the cultures exclusively in the presence of Flt3. The effects of SU11248 on the biologic effects of concomitant Cbl-70Z and Flt3 expression (Figure 3D) indicated that the Flt3 kinase activity was necessary for the observed synergistic biologic effects. To exclude the possibility that off-target effects of chemical kinase inhibitors might be responsible for growth inhibition of the cells, we coexpressed a kinase-inactive Flt3 mutant with Cbl-R420Q in 32D cells. As expected from the inhibitor experiments, kinase-dead Flt3 (Flt3-K644A) failed to induce autonomous growth of 32D cells, even in the presence of Cbl-R420Q (Figure 5A-C). We then analyzed the effects of Cbl proteins on the strength, the quality, and the duration of Flt3 signaling (Figure 5D-E). Coexpression of wild-type Cbl with Flt3 receptors led to diminished activation of Akt and Erk signaling. In contrast, coexpression of Cbl-70Z (Figure 5D) or Cbl-R420Q (Figure 5E and data not shown) induced a stronger activation of the Akt and Erk pathways as indicated by phosphorylation of the respective signaling intermediates after 10 minutes. In time course experiments, we observed a significantly prolonged activation of Erk activity up to 60 minutes after FL stimulation in cells coexpressing Cbl-70Z or Cbl-R420Q (Figure 5E). In summary, our data show that the newly identified AML-associated Cbl mutation R420Q disturbs Flt3 signal mitigation comparable with Cbl-70Z, and likewise affects 32D cell growth in an Flt3 kinase–dependent manner.
Discussion
In human cancers, deregulated activation of receptor tyrosine kinases is a frequent event. Aberrant activation of RTKs can be induced by inappropriate ligand stimulation, by overexpression due to genetic amplification, or by activating or sensitizing mutations in the coding region of the RTKs.33-35 Also, inappropriate activation of RTKs by loss of negative regulators is increasingly recognized as a possible alternative mechanism to lead to aberrant RTK activity in cancer cells.36-39 The RTK Flt3 is highly expressed in AML and it is widely accepted that deregulated Flt3 activity has important functions in AML pathogenesis. To understand the mechanisms that control Flt3 signaling, we have analyzed the role of c-Cbl for Flt3 regulation. We show that c-Cbl physically associates with Flt3-WT as well as with the most common activating Flt3 mutation, Flt3-ITD. We also show that upon ligand stimulation, Flt3 is rapidly ubiquitylated and that a known dominant-negative mutant of c-Cbl (Cbl-70Z) inhibits Flt3 internalization and ubiquitylation (Figure 2) with the consequence of a longer duration of Flt3 signaling (Figure 5). Also, we confirm previous results that tyrosine phosphorylation of c-Cbl is enhanced by Flt3 activation.25
Sequencing analysis of Cbl in blasts from a cohort of AML patients revealed a single case of a somatic mutation in the RING domain of c-Cbl (Cbl-R420Q). Analysis of the amino acid substitution and comparison of the resulting mutant protein with the published structure of the c-Cbl ubiquitin ligase domain suggests that this mutant residue is critically involved in the binding of c-Cbl with the E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Ubc-H7 and suggests that a mutation at this position may inhibit the E3 ligase activity of c-Cbl.31 Indeed, we present biochemical evidence that the R420Q mutation strongly inhibits the ubiquitin ligase activity of c-Cbl, the essential function of c-Cbl required for RTK signaling mitigation.
Our data also provide evidence that Cbl-mediated regulation of Flt3 is biologically important. Coexpression of Cbl-70Z or Cbl-R420Q with Flt3 readily transformed 32D cells, even in the absence of Flt3 ligand. It has been previously reported that dominant-negative Cbl mutants enhance the survival of myeloid cells. However, as in our report, they alone did not support cellular proliferation.40 Here, we observed a strong synergism between Cbl-70Z or Cbl-R420Q and Flt3 receptors in myeloid transformation. Its exact molecular mechanisms remain to be elucidated. However, our data obtained with a Flt3-specific inhibitor (Figure 3D) and the kinase-inactive Flt3 receptor (Figure 5A) suggest that Flt3 kinase activity is required for the observed synergism. It appears likely that Cbl-70Z and Cbl-R420Q cause a low but constitutive activation of the Flt3 receptor. Since Cbl proteins have been shown to also associate with c-kit and influence c-kit activity,6,41,42 it may well be that the observed synergism relates not only to Flt3, but also to other hematopoietic type III RTKs. Further work will be required to analyze the effects of dominant-negative Cbl proteins in cells expressing various RTKs. Taken together, these data show that Cbl proteins are directly involved in Flt3 signal control and suggest that interference with the function of negative regulators of RTK signaling may play a role in AML transformation.
To our knowledge, the novel Cbl-R420Q mutation identified here is the first reported Cbl mutation with obvious transforming ability in human disease. Although we identified this mutation in a single patient, it is possible that alterations in the negative regulatory machinery of RTKs are more frequently involved in leukemogenic signal transduction. First, Cbl proteins consist of a family of several members with presumably redundant function. Dominant-negative mutations in any Cbl family member may induce similar effects as observed for Cbl-R420Q. Also, termination of RTK signaling is a complex multistep process, which requires several sorting, segregation, and degradation steps, each of which involve many different proteins.43-45 It may well be that other proteins involved in these processes may be mutated more frequently in AML and possibly in other human cancers. This notion, at least in part, is also supported by data showing that proteins involved in the endocytosis machinery are often constituents of oncogenic fusion proteins.39,46,47 Furthermore, inappropriate expression of proteins involved in endocytic sorting (ie, Hrs and Tsg101) have also been implicated in human cancers.39 The potent effects of the point mutation of c-Cbl on myeloid cell proliferation and survival warrant further search for such mutations in clonal myeloid disorders, especially in patients without known activating mutations in signaling intermediates.
Originally, c-Cbl was described as a proto-oncogene of an animal virus that induced lymphoma in mice.48 It has been shown that the corresponding viral oncogene, v-Cbl, is a relatively weak oncogene.5 V-Cbl is a truncated protein, consisting of the N-terminal half of Cbl, retaining not much more than the PTB domain of c-Cbl. Subsequently, the description of other, more potent Cbl oncogenes led to the definition of requirements for the transforming potential of Cbl proteins.5,38 Presence of the PTB domain and simultaneous interference with the E3 ligase function of c-Cbl have been defined to be essential minimal requirements for Cbl-mediated transformation, presumably through dominant-negative interference with the normal Cbl function. Our biochemical analyses here show that Cbl-R420Q fulfils these requirements.
However, it is not quite clear, whether Cbl-mediated transformation is solely due to dominant-negative effects of oncogenic Cbl proteins, or whether the mutations also provide a gain of function. Homozygous c-Cbl knock-out mice do not display an obvious tumor phenotype,5,49 suggesting that the c-Cbl mutations that we analyzed here are dominant-negative over not only c-Cbl. One explanation could be that they are dominant negative over several Cbl family members, circumventing redundancy that could explain the lack of the knock-out phenotype.
Alternatively, the transforming phenotype of oncogenic Cbl mutants could be due to an additional gain of function, which provides activating signals to the cells. For example, it has been shown that c-Cbl binds to and activates Cool-1, which on the one hand inhibits Cbl-mediated receptor endocytosis and degradation, and on the other hand functions as a regulated guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for Cdc42. This (presumably proto-oncogenic) GEF activity is activated by its phosphorylation in Cbl-Cool-1-tyrosine kinase complexes.50,51 Furthermore, phosphorylated c-Cbl forms complexes with PI3-K leading to Akt and Erk activation.52 The Src family kinases Fyn and Lyn associate more strongly with increasingly phosphorylated c-Cbl.53-55 Recruitment of the CrkL adaptor protein by c-Cbl has been reported to facilitate activation of Jnk and Rap1. All these examples illustrate the extensive positive involvement of Cbl proteins in signaling.56-58 Most of these activities have been mapped to the C-terminal multiadaptor domain, which contains phosphotyrosine sites that can bind to positive signal regulators such as SHP2 and PI3-K.13,52,56,59 Consequently, oncogenic Cbl proteins that retain the C-terminal part have been shown to be more potent than Cbl oncogenes lacking this domain.5,15 Furthermore, the phosphotyrosine sites in the C-terminus are highly phosphorylated in Cbl-70Z, suggesting that this region of Cbl may play an important role in oncogenic properties at least of Cbl-70Z. Interestingly, the novel Cbl-R420Q mutation fulfils all the requirements of potent Cbl oncogenes, since it consists only of a point mutation in the E3 ligase domain of c-Cbl, maintaining all other protein domains that are potentially involved in positively mediating oncogenic RTK signaling.
Importantly, Cbl mutant–mediated transformation depended on the presence of Flt3 and can be blocked by Flt3 kinase inhibitors. Given the near-universal importance of the Cbl-associated machinery in RTK signal mitigation, it is very likely that mutations in the involved proteins (such as Cbl R420Q) are influenced in their transforming activity by different RTKs. Thus, our data provide an important example for the critical involvement of tyrosine kinases in a transformation mechanism, where the primary genetic defect is localized in the negative regulatory machinery. Hence, patients without activating mutations in RTKs may suffer from RTK-driven disease and may benefit from kinase inhibitor treatment, similar to patients harboring activating RTK mutations.
Collectively, the data presented here illustrate a novel mechanism of Flt3-mediated transformation in AML through somatic mutation in a protein involved in the termination of RTK signaling. We show that dominant-negative forms of the E3 ligase c-Cbl induce autonomous growth in cytokine-dependent myeloid progenitor cells. However, this effect is strictly dependent on the presence of Flt3 kinase activity and can be targeted by Flt3 kinase inhibitors. Our results justify further analyses of negative tyrosine kinase regulatory networks that may be dysfunctional to cause oncogenic signal transduction in AML.
An Inside Blood analysis of this article appears at the front of this issue.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Se 600/3-1), the Deutsche Krebshilfe (10-6697), the Medical Faculty of the University of Münster (IMF Sa 110404), and the Fritz Thyssen Stiftung (10.05.2.178).
We thank Marion Baas for her excellent technical assistance and the AML Cooperative Group (AMLCG) for providing samples from leukemia patients. We thank Dr Dirk Bohmann, Dr Wallace Y. Langdon, and Dr Hamid Band for their generous gifts of plasmid constructs used in this study.
Authorship
Contribution: B.S., C.C., and H.S. conceptualized the idea and designed the research; N.C. and M.H.H.S. performed in vitro GST pull-downs, Far Western blot analyses, in vitro ubiquitylation assays, and internalization assays for PDGF and EGF receptors; B.S., C.C., M.R., R.G., and C.T. performed most of the other work presented here; B.S., C.C., N.C., M.H.H.S., L.T., J.S., C.B., B.A., S.K., S.R.B., J.D., W.E.B., C.M.-T., I.D., and H.S. were involved in data analyses and discussions; B.S., C.C., B.A., and H.S. wrote the paper. B.S. and C.C. contributed equally to the work presented here.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Hubert Serve, Department of Medicine, Hematology and Oncology, University of Münster, Albert-Schweitzer-Strasse 33, 48129 Münster, Germany; e-mail: serve@uni-muenster.de.
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