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A study of a mutant form of receptor tyrosine kinase Tie-2 associated with venous malformations

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posted on 2014-12-15, 10:30 authored by Paul Neville. Morris
The receptor tyrosine kinase Tie-2 is expressed predominantly in endothelial cells and is involved in blood vessel formation and maintenance. A missense mutation resulting in an R849 to W substitution in the kinase domain of Tie-2 has been reported to co-segregate with an autosomal dominantly inherited form of venous malformation (VM). In this disorder focal masses arise comprising of numerous dilated vascular channels lined with endothelial cells but largely lacking mural cell support. The mechanism whereby R849W mutant Tie-2 results in VM is not known. The aim of this study was to determine the functional effects of this mutant form of Tie-2 in order to gain insight into the mechanism by which it results in VM. To do this, wild type and VM (R849W) mutant Tie-2 were subcloned into mammalian expression vector pCR3 and stably expressed in endothelial cells. the VM mutant form of Tie-2 exhibited elevated constitutive tyrosine phosphorylation compared with wild type receptor in endothelial cells. expression of VM mutant Tie-2 caused a dramatic increase in endothelial cell survival during serum starvation. Under basal conditions VM mutant Tie-2 was found to be associated with a number of tyrosine phosphorylated proteins including Shp-2 and the adapter protein Shc. Consistent with effects on cell survival, endothelial cells expressing VM mutant Tie-2 had constitutively activated Akt. These data suggest the mutant form of Tie-2 may act to prevent regression of mural cell poor vessels via ligand-independent Tie-2 activation of Akt and endothelial survival.

History

Date of award

2005-01-01

Author affiliation

Surgery

Awarding institution

University of Leicester

Qualification level

  • Doctoral

Qualification name

  • MD

Language

en

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