| Literature DB >> 31391340 |
Anna K Scherger1, Mona Al-Maarri2, H. Carlo Maurer3, Markus Schick1, Sabine Maurer1, Rupert Öllinger3,4,5, Irene Gonzalez-Menendez6, Manuela Martella6, Markus Thaler7, Konstanze Pechloff4,7,8, Katja Steiger8,9, Sandrine Sander10, Jürgen Ruland4,7,8, Roland Rad3,4,5,8, Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez6, Frank T Wunderlich2, Stefan Rose-John11, Ulrich Keller1,8,12.
Abstract
Aberrant activity of the glycoprotein 130 130/JAK/STAT3 (gp130/JAK/STAT3) signaling axis is a recurrent event in inflammation and cancer. In particular, it is associated with a wide range of hematological malignancies, including multiple myeloma and leukemia. Novel targeted therapies have only been successful for some subtypes of these malignancies, underlining the need for developing robust mouse models to better dissect the role of this pathway in specific tumorigenic processes. Here, we investigated the role of selective gp130/JAK/STAT3 activation by generating a conditional mouse model. This model targeted constitutively active, cell-autonomous gp130 activity to B cells, as well as to the entire hematopoietic system. We found that regardless of the timing of activation in B cells, constitutively active gp130 signaling resulted in the formation specifically of mature B cell lymphomas and plasma cell disorders with full penetrance, only with different latencies, where infiltrating CD138+ cells were a dominant feature in every tumor. Furthermore, constitutively active gp130 signaling in all adult hematopoietic cells also led to the development specifically of largely mature, aggressive B cell cancers, again with a high penetrance of CD138+ tumors. Importantly, gp130 activity abrogated the differentiation block induced by a B cell-targeted Myc transgene and resulted in a complete penetrance of the gp130-associated, CD138+, mature B cell lymphoma phenotype. Thus, gp130 signaling selectively provides a strong growth and differentiation advantage for mature B cells and directs lymphomagenesis specifically toward terminally differentiated B cell cancers.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; Mouse models; Oncology; Signal transduction
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31391340 PMCID: PMC6693839 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.128435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708