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A marine sponge-derived lectin reveals hidden pathway for thrombopoietin receptor activation

Authors :
1000030962758
Watari, Hiromi
Kageyama, Hiromu
1000000791641
Masubuchi, Nami
Nakajima, Hiroya
Onodera, Kako
Focia, Pamela J.
Oshiro, Takumi
1000030463582
Matsui, Takashi
1000060265733
Kodera, Yoshio
1000080240901
Ogawa, Tomohisa
1000020719447
Yokoyama, Takeshi
1000040535465
Hirayama, Makoto
1000050116662
Hori, Kanji
Freymann, Douglas M.
1000050709003
Imai, Misa
1000050186798
Komatsu, Norio
1000080613843
Araki, Marito
1000020374225
Tanaka, Yoshikazu
1000020265721
Sakai, Ryuichi
1000030962758
Watari, Hiromi
Kageyama, Hiromu
1000000791641
Masubuchi, Nami
Nakajima, Hiroya
Onodera, Kako
Focia, Pamela J.
Oshiro, Takumi
1000030463582
Matsui, Takashi
1000060265733
Kodera, Yoshio
1000080240901
Ogawa, Tomohisa
1000020719447
Yokoyama, Takeshi
1000040535465
Hirayama, Makoto
1000050116662
Hori, Kanji
Freymann, Douglas M.
1000050709003
Imai, Misa
1000050186798
Komatsu, Norio
1000080613843
Araki, Marito
1000020374225
Tanaka, Yoshikazu
1000020265721
Sakai, Ryuichi
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The mode of cytokine receptor activation is diverse. Here, the authors find that the marine-sponge derived lectin ThC, a bivalent sugar binding protein, activates human cytokine receptor MPL. This mode of action resembles the pathogenic activation of MPL by mutant molecular chaperon calreticulin in hematologic malignancies. N-glycan-mediated activation of the thrombopoietin receptor (MPL) under pathological conditions has been implicated in myeloproliferative neoplasms induced by mutant calreticulin, which forms an endogenous receptor-agonist complex that traffics to the cell surface and constitutively activates the receptor. However, the molecular basis for this mechanism is elusive because oncogenic activation occurs only in the cell-intrinsic complex and is thus cannot be replicated with external agonists. Here, we describe the structure and function of a marine sponge-derived MPL agonist, thrombocorticin (ThC), a homodimerized lectin with calcium-dependent fucose-binding properties. In-depth characterization of lectin-induced activation showed that, similar to oncogenic activation, sugar chain-mediated activation persists due to limited receptor internalization. The strong synergy between ThC and thrombopoietin suggests that ThC catalyzes the formation of receptor dimers on the cell surface. Overall, the existence of sugar-mediated MPL activation, in which the mode of activation is different from the original ligand, suggests that receptor activation is unpredictably diverse in living organisms.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1409775854
Document Type :
Electronic Resource