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Colony-Stimulating Factor Receptor (CSF-1R); c-fms. By Nate Reynolds. Questions to Be Answered. What is the CSF-1 Receptor? What does the CSF-1 Receptor do in the normal cell and how does it do it? What is the link between the CSF-1 Receptor and cancer?. What is the CSF-1 Receptor? .
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Colony-Stimulating Factor Receptor(CSF-1R); c-fms. By Nate Reynolds
Questions to Be Answered • What is the CSF-1 Receptor? • What does the CSF-1 Receptor do in the normal cell and how does it do it? • What is the link between the CSF-1 Receptor and cancer?
What is the CSF-1 Receptor? • It is a receptor tyrosine kinase. • It has 4 domains: • Extracellular domain that binds the ligand • Membrane spanning domain • Cytoplasmic domain that has tyrosine kinase activity • C-terminus • Its ligand is macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF or CSF-1).
What does CSF-1 Receptor do in the normal cell? • It is responsible for regulating the growth, proliferation, and differentiation of monocyte and macrophage precursors. • The binding of M-CSF to its receptor during G-1 results in a commitment through the progression of DNA synthesis and cell division. • It has also been shown to be expressed in normal trophoblast and fibroblast cells.
How does the CSF-1 Receptor work normally? • It binds its ligand, dimerizes, and phosphorylates itself. • Its phosphorylated tyrosine residues serve as binding sites for other proteins via SH2 domains. • A signal cascade is produced culminating in mitogenesis and morphological changes. 1) Believed to activate the Ras pathway as well as the GTP binding proteins Rac and Rho.
How does CSF-1 Receptor work normally? • Once activated the receptor is internalized and degraded. • This is an important part of the regulation process; it disallows the continued propagation of the signal.
What is the link between CSF-1 Receptor and cancer? • The gene that encodes for the CSF-1 Receptor (c-fms) was found as a homolog to v-fms, or feline sarcoma virus. • V-fms encodes a constitutively active form of the receptor, resulting in increased growth and proliferation, as well as changes in morphology.
Understanding cancer: Differences between c-fms and v-fms Differences between c-fms protein and v-fms protein occur in three places: • The extracellular domain • The intracellular domain • The C-terminus
Differences between c-fms and v-fms: The extracellular domain • In v-fms a leucine at amino acid 301 is changed to serine. • This point mutation alone causes some transformation, but not as much as pure v-fms. • Likely that point mutation causes a conformational changes similar to the one caused by the binding of the ligand.
The intracellular domain • In v-fms tyrosine residue Y807 represents a major autophosphorylation site. • Replacing this residue with phenylalanine in the v-fms gene resulted in no change in cell growth or proliferation. • It did impact morphology, reverting the cells back to their untransformed state.
The intracellular domain • When phosphorylated Y807 interacts with p120RasGap and p190RhoGap. • Interaction with and phosphorylation of p120RasGap is an important step in the cascade of events leading to the breakdown of the actin cytoskeleton.
The C-terminus • The C-terminus of c-fms contains 40-50 amino acids depending on the species; the v-fms protein contains 11 different residues. • A chimera of c-fms and the v-fms C-terminus does not transform cells in the absence of the ligand, M-CSF 1.
The C-terminus • The C-terminus is a negative regulator, likely involved in the internalization, ubiquitination, and degradation of the CSF-1 Receptor. • Autophosphorylation of Tyr 973 in the C-terminus region allows binding of c-Cbl, which leads to ubiquitination and degradation.
Putting it together . . . • Point mutations in the extracellular domain can change the protein’s conformation to a constitutively active form. • Once activated autophosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the intracellular domain can affect changes in morphology. • The C-terminus acts as a negative regulator. • A combination of mutations leads to the most transformed cells.
CSF-1 Receptor and Cancer: More than a question of mutations In humans CSF-1 Receptor is over-expressed in certain types of cancer: • Ovarian epithelial carcinomas • Endometrial carcinomas • Mammary carcinomas • Various leukemias
Regulation of c-fms • The c-fms gene is under the control of two separate promoters, yielding two mRNA isoforms but identical proteins. • Promoter 1 is active in placental cells and promoter 2 is active in macrophages. • These promoters are abnormal (lacking TATTA-box elements and GC rich regions). • The regulation of c-fms is still enigmatic.
To conclude . . . • Despite a lack of knowledge about the regulation of the c-fms gene, the presence of v-fms provides hope for cell-specific therapies. • V-fms gives clues as to what regions of the c-fms protein are important for both morphological transformation and mitogenesis.