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β-Arrestin2 mediates progression of murine primary myelofibrosis
Lindsay A.M. Rein, James W. Wisler, Jihee Kim, Barbara Theriot, LiYin Huang, Trevor Price, Haeyoon Yang, Minyong Chen, Wei Chen, Dorothy Sipkins, Yuri Fedoriw, Julia K.L. Walker, Richard T. Premont, Robert J. Lefkowitz
Lindsay A.M. Rein, James W. Wisler, Jihee Kim, Barbara Theriot, LiYin Huang, Trevor Price, Haeyoon Yang, Minyong Chen, Wei Chen, Dorothy Sipkins, Yuri Fedoriw, Julia K.L. Walker, Richard T. Premont, Robert J. Lefkowitz
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Research Article Hematology Oncology

β-Arrestin2 mediates progression of murine primary myelofibrosis

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Abstract

Primary myelofibrosis is a myeloproliferative neoplasm associated with significant morbidity and mortality, for which effective therapies are lacking. β-Arrestins are multifunctional adaptor proteins involved in developmental signaling pathways. One isoform, β-arrestin2 (βarr2), has been implicated in initiation and progression of chronic myeloid leukemia, another myeloproliferative neoplasm closely related to primary myelofibrosis. Accordingly, we investigated the relationship between βarr2 and primary myelofibrosis. In a murine model of MPLW515L-mutant primary myelofibrosis, mice transplanted with donor βarr2-knockout (βarr2–/–) hematopoietic stem cells infected with MPL-mutant retrovirus did not develop myelofibrosis, whereas controls uniformly succumbed to disease. Although transplanted βarr2–/– cells homed properly to marrow, they did not repopulate long-term due to increased apoptosis and decreased self-renewal of βarr2–/– cells. In order to assess the effect of acute loss of βarr2 in established primary myelofibrosis in vivo, we utilized a tamoxifen-induced Cre-conditional βarr2-knockout mouse. Mice that received Cre (+) donor cells and developed myelofibrosis had significantly improved survival compared with controls. These data indicate that lack of antiapoptotic βarr2 mediates marrow failure of murine hematopoietic stem cells overexpressing MPLW515L. They also indicate that βarr2 is necessary for progression of primary myelofibrosis, suggesting that it may serve as a novel therapeutic target in this disease.

Authors

Lindsay A.M. Rein, James W. Wisler, Jihee Kim, Barbara Theriot, LiYin Huang, Trevor Price, Haeyoon Yang, Minyong Chen, Wei Chen, Dorothy Sipkins, Yuri Fedoriw, Julia K.L. Walker, Richard T. Premont, Robert J. Lefkowitz

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Figure 2

Donor KLS cells from WT, β-arrestin1–knockout, and β-arrestin2–knockout mice home to marrow.

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Donor KLS cells from WT, β-arrestin1–knockout, and β-arrestin2–knockout ...
(A) Montage image and zoom of mouse calvarium engrafted with DiR+ cells (gray = bone marrow vasculature, Dex-Cy5; red = DiR+ cells). Scale bars: calvarium: 400 μm; zoom image: 75 μm. (B) Representative images of WT, βarr1–/–, and βarr2–/– cells homing to calvarial bone marrow. In vivo imaging performed +20 hours after engraftment. Representative images of n = 3 experiments. Scale bars: 75 μm. (C) Cell homing count for WT, βarr1–/–, and βarr2–/– cells (mean ± SEM; n = 3). βarr1–/–, β-arrestin1 knockout; βarr2–/–, β-arrestin2 knockout.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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