Murine Pten(-/-) T-ALL requires non-redundant PI3K/mTOR and DLL4/Notch1 signals for maintenance and γc/TCR signals for thymic exit.
2014
Abstract T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALLs) commonly display constitutively active PI3K/mTOR and Notch signaling. However, controversy surrounds whether these pathways have independent functions and whether Pten loss is sufficient to generate resistance to Notch inhibition. Here we report that Pten −/− T-ALL is sensitive to either PI3K/mTOR or Notch inhibition alone, each pathway controlling distinct downstream signaling events that cannot be rescued by activation of the other pathway, consistent with independent, non-redundant functions. Although many human T-ALLs display constitutively activating Notch1 mutations, primary Pten −/− T-ALLs expressed wild-type Notch1 and depended on the Notch ligand DLL4 in vivo . Pten −/− T-ALLs with or without γc/TCR signaling responded similarly to PI3K/mTOR and Notch inhibition, although extended culture in vitro occasionally induced Notch-independent growth. However, unlike the T-ALLs lacking only Pten, eight of 23 Pten −/− T-ALLs that also lacked γc/TCR signaling accumulated Notch1 mutations, suggesting crosstalk between γc/TCR and Notch signaling. Importantly, we concluded that loss of γc/TCR signaling also inhibited thymic exit of Pten −/− T-ALLs. Our results may be clinically relevant in revealing that Pten loss is not sufficient to engender resistance to Notch inhibition, uncovering a role in T-ALL for ligand-dependent induction of wild-type Notch1, and suggesting that γc/TCR signaling could be targeted for preventing metastasis.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
48
References
7
Citations
NaN
KQI