The ROS1 receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) possesses the largest extracellular amino-terminal domain (ECD) among the human RTK family, yet the mechanisms regulating its activation are not fully understood. While chimeric ROS1 fusion proteins, resulting from chromosomal rearrangements, are well-known oncogenic drivers, their activation mechanisms also remain underexplored. To elucidate the role of the ROS1 ECD in catalytic regulation, we engineered a series of amino-terminal deletion mutants. Our functional studies compared the full-length ROS1 receptor, the CD74-ROS1 oncogenic fusion, and ECD-deleted ROS1 constructs, identifying the ECD regions that inhibit ROS1 tyrosine kinase activity. Notably, we found that deletion of the ROS1 ECD alone significantly increases constitutive catalytic activation and neoplastic transformation in the absence of an amino-terminal fusion partner, challenging the presumed necessity for a dimerization domain in the activation mechanism of kinase fusions in cancer. Our data suggest that inter-genic deletions resulting in the loss of the ECD may be underappreciated oncogenic drivers in cancer. Furthermore, our studies demonstrate that RNASE7 is not a ligand for the ROS1 receptor as previously reported, confirming that ROS1 remains an orphan receptor. Thus, the discovery of a ROS1 ligand remains an important future priority. These findings highlight the potential for disease-associated somatic aberrations or splice variants that modify the ROS1 ECD to promote constitutive receptor activation, warranting further investigation.
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