Login / Signup

Neuroblast differentiation during development and in neuroblastoma requires KIF1Bβ-mediated transport of TRKA.

Stuart M FellShuijie LiKarin WallisAnna KockOlga SurovaVilma RraklliCarolin S HöfigWenyu LiJens MittagMarie Arsenian HenrikssonRajappa S KenchappaJohan HolmbergPer KognerSusanne Schlisio
Published in: Genes & development (2017)
We recently identified pathogenic KIF1Bβ mutations in sympathetic nervous system malignancies that are defective in developmental apoptosis. Here we deleted KIF1Bβ in the mouse sympathetic nervous system and observed impaired sympathetic nervous function and misexpression of genes required for sympathoadrenal lineage differentiation. We discovered that KIF1Bβ is required for nerve growth factor (NGF)-dependent neuronal differentiation through anterograde transport of the NGF receptor TRKA. Moreover, pathogenic KIF1Bβ mutations identified in neuroblastoma impair TRKA transport. Expression of neuronal differentiation markers is ablated in both KIF1Bβ-deficient mouse neuroblasts and human neuroblastomas that lack KIF1Bβ. Transcriptomic analyses show that unfavorable neuroblastomas resemble mouse sympathetic neuroblasts lacking KIF1Bβ independent of MYCN amplification and the loss of genes neighboring KIF1B on chromosome 1p36. Thus, defective precursor cell differentiation, a common trait of aggressive childhood malignancies, is a pathogenic effect of KIF1Bβ loss in neuroblastomas. Furthermore, neuropathy-associated KIF1Bβ mutations impede cargo transport, providing a direct link between neuroblastomas and neurodegeneration.
Keyphrases
  • growth factor
  • genome wide
  • endothelial cells
  • poor prognosis
  • oxidative stress
  • cell death
  • gene expression
  • brain injury
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • bioinformatics analysis