Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) represent an important cellular subset within the glioblastoma (WHO grade IV) microenvironment and are a potential therapeutic target. TAMs display a continuum of different polarization states between antitumorigenic M1 and protumorigenic M2 phenotypes, with a lower M1/M2 ratio correlating with worse prognosis. Here, we investigated the effect of macrophage polarization on anti-CD47 antibody-mediated phagocytosis of human glioblastoma cells in vitro, as well as the effect of anti-CD47 on the distribution of M1 versus M2 macrophages within human glioblastoma cells grown in mouse xenografts. Bone marrow-derived mouse macrophages and peripheral blood-derived human macrophages were polarized in vitro toward M1 or M2 phenotypes and verified by flow cytometry. Primary human glioblastoma cell lines were offered as targets to mouse and human M1 or M2 polarized macrophages in vitro. The addition of an anti-CD47 monoclonal antibody led to enhanced tumor-cell phagocytosis by mouse and human M1 and M2 macrophages. In both cases, the anti-CD47-induced phagocytosis by M1 was more prominent than that for M2. Dissected tumors from human glioblastoma xenografted within NOD.Cg-Prkdcscid Il2rgtm1Wjl/SzJ mice and treated with anti-CD47 showed a significant increase of M1 macrophages within the tumor. These data show that anti-CD47 treatment leads to enhanced tumor cell phagocytosis by both M1 and M2 macrophage subtypes with a higher phagocytosis rate by M1 macrophages. Furthermore, these data demonstrate that anti-CD47 treatment alone can shift the phenotype of macrophages toward the M1 subtype in vivo.
SUMMARY Self-renewal and proliferation of nephron progenitor cells and the decision to initiate nephrogenesis are crucial events directing kidney development. Despite recent advancements in defining lineage and regulators for the progenitors, fundamental questions about mechanisms driving expansion of the progenitors remain unanswered. Here we show that Eya1 interacts with Six2 and Myc to control self-renewing cell activity. Cell fate tracing reveals a developmental restriction of the Eya1+ population within the intermediate mesoderm to nephron-forming cell fates and a common origin shared between caudal mesonephric and metanephric nephrons. Conditional inactivation of Eya1 leads to loss of Six2 expression and premature epithelialization of the progenitors. Six2 mediates translocation of Eya1 to the nucleus, where Eya1 uses its threonine phosphatase activity to control Myc phosphorylation/dephosphorylation and function in the progenitor cells. Our results reveal a functional link between Eya1, Six2, and Myc in driving the expansion and maintenance of the multipotent progenitors during nephrogenesis.
EYA1 is known to be overexpressed in human breast cancer, in which the Myc protein is also accumulated in association with decreased phospho-T58 (pT58) levels. We have recently reported that EYA1 functions as a unique protein phosphatase to dephosphorylate Myc at pT58 to regulate Myc levels. However, it remains unclear whether EYA1-mediated Myc dephosphorylation on T58 is a critical function in regulating Myc protein stability in breast cancer. Furthermore, EYA1's substrate specificity has remained elusive. In this study, we have investigated these questions, and here, we report that depletion of EYA1 using short hairpin RNA (shRNA) in breast cancer cells destabilizes the Myc protein and increases pT58 levels, leading to an increase in the doubling time and impairment of cell cycle progression. In correlation with EYA1-mediated stabilization of cMyc and reduced levels of pT58, EYA1 greatly reduced cMyc-FBW7 binding and cMyc ubiquitination, thus providing novel insight into how EYA1 acts to regulate the FBW7-mediated Myc degradation machinery. We found that the conserved C-terminal haloacid dehalogenase domain of EYA1, which has been reported to have only tyrosine phosphatase activity, has dual phosphatase activities, and both the N-and C-terminal domains interact with substrates to increase the catalytic activity of EYA1. Enzymatic assay and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis demonstrated that EYA1 has a striking conformation preference for phospho-T58 of Myc. Together, our results not only provide novel structural evidence about the conformation specificity of EYA1 in dephosphorylating phosphothreonine in Myc but also reveal an important mechanism contributing to Myc deregulation in human breast cancer. KEYWORDS EYA1, threonine phosphatase, Myc, degradation, FBW7, cell proliferation, breast cancer, deregulation T he transcription factor Eyes absent (EYA) represents the prototype of a novel class of eukaryotic aspartyl protein tyrosine phosphatases (1-3) that play important roles in development and disease (4-6). While the conserved C-terminal haloacid dehalogenase domain of EYA (ED), which contains the signature motif for the aspartate-based serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) phosphatase family (1-3, 7), has been reported to have only tyrosine phosphatase activity (8), a recent study reported that the N terminus of EYA (NT), which bears no sequence similarity to any known Ser/Thr phosphatase families, has Thr phosphatase activity (8). Therefore, it remains unclear which domain of EYA contains residues for substrate binding and catalytic activity and how EYA achieves
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