Uveal melanoma (UM) is the most common primary intraocular cancer in adults with a high death rate as the cancer progresses. Currently, there is no targeted therapy and common treatments, like surgery and radiation therapy, can cause severe side effects. Consequently, there is a critical need to find novel therapies. The most common oncogenic mutant in uveal melanoma, GαqQ209L,constitutively activates downstream pathways, resulting in acceleration of abnormal cell growth. Regulator of G protein Signaling 2 (RGS2), a specific and potent negative regulator of Gαq, deactivates Gq signaling through two different mechanisms, namely acting as a GTPase-activating protein (GAP) and as an effector antagonist. Given that previous data indicate that RGS2 is unable to act as a GAP on GαqQ209L, our central hypothesis is that RGS2 can act as an effector antagonist on this oncogenic mutant, and thereby inhibit UM cell growth. We used a UM cell line, 92.1, which expresses the GαqQ209L mutant endogenously, as a model system. A Tet-one inducible expression system was used to establish stable cell lines with doxycycline (dox)-inducible RGS2 expression. We created cell lines with dox-inducible expression of RGS2WT, as well as two RGS2 mutants, RGS2N149A and RGS2S179D. RGS2N149A does not have GAP activity towards Gαq, however, association with GαqQ209L is maintained, as demonstrated by co-immunoprecipitation. In contrast, RGS2S179D associates significantly less with GαqQ209L. Our results show that dox-induced RGS2 expression inhibits 92.1 cell growth. RGS2N149A has the same inhibition rate as RGS2WT, while RGS2S179D has no effect on cell growth. We also determined effects of RGS2 on signal pathways downstream of GαqQ209L. Taken together our data indicates that RGS2 can inhibit uveal UM cancer cell growth by associating with GαqQ209L. This effect is independent of the canonical GAP activity common to all RGS proteins. Instead, it indicates an effector antagonism mechanism.
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