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Functional Selectivity in Cytokine Signaling Revealed Through a Pathogenic EPO Mutation
Author(s) -
Ah Ram Kim,
Jacob C. Ulirsch,
Stephan Wilmes,
Ekrem Ünal,
Ignacio Moraga,
Musa Karakükçü,
Daniel Yuan,
Shideh Kazerounian,
Nour J. Abdulhay,
David S. King,
Namrata Gupta,
Stacey Gabriel,
Eric S. Lander,
Türkan Patıroğlu,
Alper Özcan,
Mehmet Akif Özdemir,
K. Christopher García,
Jacob Piehler,
Hanna T. Gazda,
Daryl E. Klein,
Vijay G. Sankaran
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2017.02.026
Subject(s) - biology , erythropoietin receptor , socs2 , cytokine receptor , stat5 , erythropoietin , cytokine , signal transduction , microbiology and biotechnology , receptor , mutant , phosphorylation , mutation , effector , immunology , biochemistry , gene , genetics , suppressor
Cytokines are classically thought to stimulate downstream signaling pathways through monotonic activation of receptors. We describe a severe anemia resulting from a homozygous mutation (R150Q) in the cytokine erythropoietin (EPO). Surprisingly, the EPO R150Q mutant shows only a mild reduction in affinity for its receptor but has altered binding kinetics. The EPO mutant is less effective at stimulating erythroid cell proliferation and differentiation, even at maximally potent concentrations. While the EPO mutant can stimulate effectors such as STAT5 to a similar extent as the wild-type ligand, there is reduced JAK2-mediated phosphorylation of select downstream targets. This impairment in downstream signaling mechanistically arises from altered receptor dimerization dynamics due to extracellular binding changes. These results demonstrate how variation in a single cytokine can lead to biased downstream signaling and can thereby cause human disease. Moreover, we have defined a distinct treatable form of anemia through mutation identification and functional studies.

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