Abstract

Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF or CSF3) and its receptor CSF3R regulate granulopoiesis, neutrophil function, and hematopoietic stem cell mobilization. Recent studies have uncovered an oncogenic role of mutations in the CSF3R gene in many hematologic malignancies. To find additional CSF3R mutations that give rise to cell transformation, we performed a cellular transformation assay in which murine interleukin 3 (IL-3)-dependent Ba/F3 cells were transduced with WT CSF3R plasmid and screened for spontaneous growth in the absence of IL-3. Any outgrowth clones were sequenced to identify CSF3R mutations with transformation capacity. We identified several novel mutations and determined that they transform cells via four distinct mechanisms: 1) cysteine- and disulfide bond-mediated dimerization (S581C); 2) polar, noncharged amino acid substitution at the transmembrane helix dimer interface at residue Thr-640; 3) increased internalization by a Glu-524 substitution that mimics a low G-CSF dose; and 4) hydrophobic amino acid substitutions in the membrane-proximal residues Thr-612, Thr-615, and Thr-618. Furthermore, the change in signaling activation was related to an altered CSF3R localization. We also found that CSF3R-induced STAT3 and ERK activations require CSF3R internalization, whereas STAT5 activation occurred at the cell surface. Cumulatively, we have expanded the regions of the CSF3R extracellular and transmembrane domains in which missense mutations exhibit leukemogenic capacity and have further elucidated the mechanistic underpinnings that underlie altered CSF3R expression, dimerization, and signaling activation.

Highlights

  • Granulocyte colony–stimulating factor (G-CSF or CSF3) and its receptor CSF3R regulate granulopoiesis, neutrophil function, and hematopoietic stem cell mobilization

  • We found that CSF3R-induced STAT3 and ERK activations require CSF3R internalization, whereas STAT5 activation occurred at the cell surface

  • We have observed that Ba/F3 cells harboring CSF3R WT can sometimes spontaneously transform at later time points in a Ba/F3 IL-3 withdrawal assay due to the acquisition of bona fide oncogenic mutations in CSF3R, such as the T618I mutation [22]

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

G-CSF, granulocyte colony–stimulating factor ( known as CSF3); CSF3R, CSF3 receptor; ␤-ME, ␤-mercaptoethanol; BM, bone marrow; pSTAT, phosphorylated STAT; pERK, phosphorylated ERK; EGFR, EGF receptor; ANOVA, analysis of variance. W341C was further shown to transform cells via cysteine- and disulfide bond–mediated dimer formation. We have observed that Ba/F3 cells harboring CSF3R WT can sometimes spontaneously transform at later time points in a Ba/F3 IL-3 withdrawal assay due to the acquisition of bona fide oncogenic mutations in CSF3R, such as the T618I mutation [22]. We took advantage of this Ba/F3 spontaneous transformation model and performed sequencing of the outgrown clones to identify novel CSF3R activating mutations that would further inform us about the biology of this receptor

Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures

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