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Negative Regulatory Mechanisms Underlying EPO Receptor Signaling and Erythropoiesis

Erythropoietin (EPO) is the primary cytokine regulator of erythropoiesis. Fundamental to this action is the ability of EPO to bind the EPO receptor (EPO-R), and activate the primary associated tyrosine kinase, JAK2. The critical importance of EPO, EPO-R and JAK2 to erythropoiesis is demonstrated by the fatal embryonic anemia that develops upon EPO, EPO-R or JAK2 deletion. Positive regulation of intracellular signal transduction pathways downstream of EPO-R and JAK2 are well documented, but less is known about negative regulation of EPO-R signaling. Two distinct experimental strategies were utilized to examine a subset of the negative regulatory mechanisms underlying EPO-R signaling and erythropoiesis.
Mice deficient in the E3 ubiquitin ligase, Cbl, were generated previously and displayed elevated platelet numbers, expansion of splenic red pulp and splenomegaly, suggesting that Cbl-/- mice have defects in megakaryocyte/erythrocyte progenitors or more committed cells of each lineage. Our studies illustrated that genetic ablation of Cbl resulted in elevated total numbers of Burst Forming Unit-Erythroid and Colony Forming Unit-Erythroid, but decreased bone marrow-derived late erythroblasts. Cbl-deficient late erythroblasts displayed elevated apoptosis, as well as increased expression of Foxo3a and increased mRNA levels of the pro-apoptotic genes, Bim and FasL. These studies implicate Cbl as an important negative regulator of multiple facets of erythroid signaling.
The discovery that EPO-R is ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome and lysosome led us to examine the role of EPO-R ubiquitination on signal transduction and proliferation. Lysine mutagenesis of EPO-R showed that K348, K388 and K428 were the primary ubiquitin acceptor sites when EPO-R mutants were expressed in HEK 293T cells. BaF3 cells expressing an EPO-R deficient in cytoplasmic lysines displayed diminished EPO-mediated EPO-R, JAK2, PKB and STAT5 phosphorylation and could not proliferate in response to EPO. The membrane proximal lysines of EPO-R, K256 and K276, were necessary for proliferation at physiologic EPO concentrations but were not required at saturating EPO concentrations. Single lysine EPO-R add-back mutants restored signaling and proliferation to BaF3 cells at physiologically elevated EPO concentrations, signifying that EPO-R lysines finely mediate EPO-dependent proliferation and signal transduction. These analyses demonstrate a positive regulatory role for lysines in signal transduction and proliferation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/19214
Date02 March 2010
CreatorsRichmond, Terri
ContributorsBarber, Dwayne
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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