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New insights into the molecular mechanisms of ROR1, ROR2, and PTK7 signaling from the proteomics and pharmacological modulation of ROR1 interactome

  • Juuli Raivola
  • , Alice Dini
  • , Kari Salokas
  • , Hanna Karvonen
  • , Wilhelmiina Niininen
  • , Emilia Piki
  • , Markku Varjosalo
  • , Daniela Ungureanu*
  • *Tämän työn vastaava kirjoittaja

    Tutkimustuotos: ArtikkeliTieteellinenvertaisarvioitu

    11 Sitaatiot (Scopus)
    6 Lataukset (Pure)

    Abstrakti

    ROR1, ROR2, and PTK7 are Wnt ligand-binding members of the receptor tyrosine kinase family. Despite their lack of catalytic activity, these receptors regulate skeletal, cardiorespiratory, and neurological development during embryonic and fetal stages. However, their overexpression in adult tissue is strongly connected to tumor development and metastasis, suggesting a strong pharmacological potential for these molecules. Wnt5a ligand can activate these receptors, but lead to divergent signaling and functional outcomes through mechanisms that remain largely unknown. Here, we developed a cellular model by stably expressing ROR1, ROR2, and PTK7 in BaF3 cells that allowed us to readily investigate side-by-side their signaling capability and functional outcome. We applied proteomic profiling to BaF3 clones and identified distinctive roles for ROR1, ROR2, and PTK7 pseudokinases in modulating the expression of proteins involved in cytoskeleton dynamics, apoptotic, and metabolic signaling. Functionally, we show that ROR1 expression enhances cell survival and Wnt-mediated cell proliferation, while ROR2 and PTK7 expression is linked to cell migration. We also demonstrate that the distal C-terminal regions of ROR1 and ROR2 are required for receptors stability and downstream signaling. To probe the pharmacological modulation of ROR1 oncogenic signaling, we used affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry (AP-MS) and proximity-dependent biotin identification (BioID) to map its interactome before and after binding of GZD824, a small molecule inhibitor previously shown to bind to the ROR1 pseudokinase domain. Our findings bring new insight into the molecular mechanisms of ROR1, ROR2, and PTK7, and highlight the therapeutic potential of targeting ROR1 with small molecule inhibitors binding to its vestigial ATP-binding site.

    AlkuperäiskieliEnglanti
    Artikkeli276
    Sivumäärä16
    JulkaisuCellular and Molecular Life Sciences
    Vuosikerta79
    Numero5
    DOI - pysyväislinkit
    TilaJulkaistu - toukok. 2022
    OKM-julkaisutyyppiA1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä

    Rahoitus

    We thank the excellent staff at the Proteomics Unit, Institute of Biotechnology and HiLIFE at University of Helsinki and Biocenter Finland for instrument funding. We also thank Minna Hankaniemi for her expertise in performing DSF for this study. We acknowledge the Tampere Mass Spectrometry Facility for their services. This work was funded by Academy of Finland (#333583, #288475, Finnish Center of Excellence in Tumor Genetics Research #312042 and AF Decision Profi6 336449); Sigrid Juselius Foundation, and Finnish Cancer Foundation (to D.U and M.V.), Emil Aaltonen Foundation, and Finnish Cultural Foundation—Pirkanmaa Regional Fund (to H.K.). We thank the excellent staff at the Proteomics Unit, Institute of Biotechnology and HiLIFE at University of Helsinki and Biocenter Finland for instrument funding. We also thank Minna Hankaniemi for her expertise in performing DSF for this study. We acknowledge the Tampere Mass Spectrometry Facility for their services. This work was funded by Academy of Finland (#333583, #288475, Finnish Center of Excellence in Tumor Genetics Research #312042?and AF Decision Profi6 336449); Sigrid Juselius Foundation, and Finnish Cancer Foundation (to D.U and M.V.), Emil Aaltonen Foundation, and Finnish Cultural Foundation?Pirkanmaa Regional Fund (to H.K.).

    Julkaisufoorumi-taso

    • Jufo-taso 2

    !!ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Molecular Medicine
    • Molecular Biology
    • Pharmacology
    • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
    • Cell Biology

    Sormenjälki

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