Lgr5 Functions As Negative Regulator of Wnt Signaling in B Cells and Is Critical for Self-Renewal of Normal and Transformed B Cells — Kadriye Nehir Cosgun (2017) | RDL Network
Lgr5 Functions As Negative Regulator of Wnt Signaling in B Cells and Is Critical for Self-Renewal of Normal and Transformed B Cells
Article 2017 en
Authors
KC
Kadriye Nehir Cosgun
AH
Anna Hecht
XY
Xin Yang
Abstract
3 min read
Abstract Background and significance: The identification of leukemia-initiating cells (LIC) in myeloid leukemias allowed for focused therapeutic approaches to prevent drug-resistance and relapse. In B cell leukemia and lymphoma, LIC occur at a high frequency (Rehe 2013), are phenotypically diverse (Aoki 2015) and can arise from any stage of B cell development (Le Viseur 2008). While self-renewal of HSCs and other organ-stem cells is regulated by a developmental hierarchy, self-renewal in the B cell lineage is induced by positive selection events, i.e. induced by antigen-receptor (BCR) signaling when B cells bind to their cognate antigen. Leucine-rich repeat containing G-protein coupled receptor 5 (Lgr5) is a Wnt target gene and through binding to its ligand R-spondin, Lgr5 modulates Wnt signaling strength. Lgr5 is widely used as stem cell marker in multiple organs, however its expression levels are very low in hematopoietic cells. Results: Unexpectedly, B cells upregulate Lgr5-expression by >20-fold, (i) when they express the pre-BCR for the first time and (ii) when they encounter antigen for the first time in germinal centers. Engagement of BCR signaling on B cell lymphomas strongly increased LGR5 expression, which was sensitive to inhibition of SYK and BTK kinases in the BCR pathway. In addition, in patients with pediatric or adult ALL, or B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), higher than median mRNA levels of LGR5 at the time of diagnosis were associated with poor clinical outcome and higher likelihood of drug-resistance and relapse. For these reasons, we studied the function of Lgr5 during normal B cell development and malignant transformation. Conditional ablation of Lgr5fl/fl alleles during earliest stages of B cell development (Mb1-Cre) resulted in a >100-fold reduction of absolute B cell numbers. In addition, inducible deletion of Lgr5 in cultured pre-B and mature B cells caused rapid cell death, demonstrating that Lgr5 function is an essential requirement for B cell development. Most studies in epithelial cells suggest a role of Lgr5 as potentiator of WNT-signaling. However, Cre-mediated deletion of Lgr5 in B cells caused cell death in parallel with massive accumulation of nuclear b-catenin. Our genetic experiments in leukemia models demonstrated that LGR5 is critical for leukemia-initiation and survival. Cre-mediated deletion of Lgr5 and b-catenin accumulation abolished colony forming capacity and the ability of leukemia cells to initiate fatal disease in transplant recipients. Likewise, inducible activation of a gain-of-function mutant of b-catenin resulted in rapid cell death in B cells. Conclusion: Lgr5 is widely established as a marker of organ stem cells with self-renewal capacity. In the absence of the developmental stem cell hierarchy in B cells, we conclude that Lgr5 expression is a biomarker of positive selection in B cells. Lgr5-expression and positive selection is induced by BCR-engagement (e.g. by antigen) or oncogenic mimics of BCR signaling in B cell malignancies (e.g. transforming oncogenes that engage the BCR pathway). Unlike in epithelial cells, LGR5 expression in B cells restricts the levels of nuclear b-catenin and enables B cell survival through negative regulation of Wnt-signaling. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Kadriye Nehir Cosgun, Gauri Deb, Xin Yang, Gang Xiao, Teresa Sadras, Jae Woong Lee, Lai N. Chan, Kohei Kume, Lu Yang, Huimin Geng, John Chan, Joo Y. Song, Hassan Jumaa, Andrew G. Polson, Hans Clevers, Markus Müschen
Kadriye Nehir Cosgun, Gauri Deb, Xin Yang, Gang Xiao, Teresa Sadras, Franziska Auer, Jae Woong Lee, Anthony Abarientos, Maurizio Mangolini, Ali Aghajanirefah, Huimin Geng, Hassan Jumaa, Andrew G. Polson, Hans Clevers, Markus Müschen
Kadriye Nehir Cosgun, Mark E. Robinson, Gauri Deb, Xin Yang, Gang Xiao, Teresa Sadras, Jae Woong Lee, Lai N. Chan, Kohei Kume, Maurizio Mangolini, Janet Winchester, Zhengshan Chen, Lu Yang, Huimin Geng, Shai Izraeli, Joo Y. Song, Wing C. Chan, Andrew G. Polson, Hassan Jumaa, Hans Clevers, Markus Müschen
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