| Literature DB >> 29751003 |
Simon Fredholm1, Andreas Willerslev-Olsen1, Özcan Met2, Linda Kubat3, Maria Gluud1, Sarah L Mathiasen1, Christina Friese4, Edda Blümel1, David L Petersen1, Tengpeng Hu1, Claudia Nastasi1, Lise M Lindahl5, Terkild B Buus1, Thorbjørn Krejsgaard1, Mariusz A Wasik6, Katharina L Kopp1, Sergei B Koralov7, Jenny L Persson8, Charlotte M Bonefeld1, Carsten Geisler1, Anders Woetmann1, Lars Iversen5, Jürgen C Becker9, Niels Ødum10.
Abstract
Deficient expression of SATB1 hampers thymocyte development and results in inept T-cell lineages. Recent data implicate dysregulated SATB1 expression in the pathogenesis of mycosis fungoides, the most frequent variant of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Here, we report on a disease stage-associated decrease of SATB1 expression and an inverse expression of STAT5 and SATB1 in situ. STAT5 inhibited SATB1 expression through induction of microRNA-155. Decreased SATB1 expression triggered enhanced expression of IL-5 and IL-9 (but not IL-6 and IL-32), whereas increased SATB1 expression had the opposite effect, indicating that the microRNA-155 target SATB1 is a repressor of IL-5 and IL-9 in malignant T cells. In accordance, inhibition of STAT5 and its upstream activator JAK3 triggered increased SATB1 expression and a concomitant suppression of IL-5 and IL-9 expression in malignant T cells. In conclusion, we provide a mechanistic link between the proto-oncogenic JAK3/STAT5/microRNA-155 pathway, SATB1, and cytokines linked to CTCL severity and progression, indicating that SATB1 dysregulation is involved in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29751003 DOI: 10.1016/j.jid.2018.03.1526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551