19:10 - 21:00
Room: Ishikawa Ongakudō Interchange Hall
Poster Session
Cbl dependent JAK2 K-63 conjugated ubiquitination is required for JAK2 phosphorylation and GM-CSF signal transduction
Jeffrey JY Yen1, Chun-Shan Liu1, Hsin-Fang Yang-Yen2, Ming-Jing Hwang1, Ching-Shu Suen1
1Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, 2Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan

JAK2 activation is crucial for cytokine receptor signal transduction and leukemogenesis. However, the underlying processes that lead to full activation of JAK2 are unclear. Here, we report a positive role for ubiquitination of JAK2 during GM-CSF-induced activation. Upon GM-CSF stimulation, JAK2 ubiquitination is significantly enhanced through K63-linked poly-ubiquitination. Studies employing both knockout and overexpression of Cbl, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, led to the conclusion that Cbl specifically promotes JAK2 ubiquitination, and this was further confirmed in vitro using a Cbl ubiquitination assay. Moreover, following GM-CSF stimulation, the levels of phospho-JAK2 and -STAT5 and a STAT5 luciferase reporter assay were all reduced in Cbl knockout cells and this effect could be rescued by Cbl expression. Mechanistically, Cbl may directly interact with, and ubiquitinate JAK2 FERM and kinase domains via the Cbl TKB domain. Using lysine-to-arginine site-directed mutagenesis, K970 in the kinase domain of JAK2 was identified as the ubiquitination site important for promoting full JAK2 activation by Cbl via K63-conjugated poly-ubiquitination. Our study suggests that GM-CSF-induced JAK2 activation is enhanced by Cbl-mediated ubiquitination of JAK2. Targeting ubiquitination of JAK2 might offer a novel therapeutic strategy against JAK2-mediated disorders.


Reference:
Mo-P7-23
Session:
Poster Session 7 “Signal transduction and metabolic regulation”
Presenter/s:
Jeffrey JY Yen
Presentation type:
Poster Presentation
Room:
Ishikawa Ongakudō Interchange Hall
Date:
Monday, 30 October 2017
Time:
19:10 - 21:00
Session times:
19:10 - 21:00