Team finds the origin of a type of thrombocytopenia caused by an oncogene

The Cell Division and Cancer Group of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO) has discovered that MASTL, a protein whose function has not yet been sufficiently investigated, plays an important role in controlling the cytoskeleton, the structure that gives shape to cells and enables their mobility and capacity for grouping. The researchers have linked the protein to the origin of an inherited thrombocytopenia, and they point out that this discovery might have implications in the fight against cancer metastasis. The findings have been published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

It has been known that MASTL plays a role in the regulation of cell division, but not much else. In 2003, a team of American researchers identified a group of patients with inherited thrombocytopenia that had a mutation on the MASTL gene. Thrombocytopenia is a condition characterised by low levels of platelets, so the patients’ bodies cannot form clots and their symptoms include uncontrollable bleeding that can lead to hematomas and haemorrhages. The thrombocytopenia found in these patients, caused by the mutation on MASTL, is known as autosomal dominant thrombocytopenia or thrombocytopenia-2.

CNIO researchers decided to study this particular mutation in the hope that it might reveal more about the functions of the protein. “There were no previous connections that would tell us how a protein that regulates cell division could regulate the number of platelets,” says Begoña Hurtado, lead author of the paper together with Marianna Trakala.

To study this relationship they generated a line of genetically modified mice that were carriers of the same mutation found in the patients with thrombocytopenia-2. Together with the CNIO Proteomics Core Unit, led by Javier Muñoz, they discovered that the mutating platelets have a different morphology and different protein content that resulted in an altered cytoskeleton. The cytoskeleton gives stability and shape to the cell, apart from determining its mobility, playing the role of a ‘muscle’ cell. It also governs cell interaction and grouping. The study has discovered that the mutation on MASTL causes defects in the cytoskeleton, which, in the case of platelets, is fundamental in forming clots.

Blocking the ‘escapist’ ability of metastatic cells

The observations have allowed the researchers to identify the molecular bases of the mutation that causes the thrombocytopenia-2 in patients, suggesting a number of possible therapies. The CNIO researchers were able to avoid the defect caused by the mutation by manipulating other enzymes of the cytoskeleton with chemical inhibitors that were already available at the clinic.

But the discovery that MASTL controls the cytoskeleton has applications in cancer metastasis research. “The cytoskeleton is crucial for many cellular functions, but cell signaling and adhesion properties (i.e. those associated with cellular migration and invasion) are the most important ones,” explains Marcos Malumbres, the group leader and project manager.

Metastatic cells go through a special process of breaking away from their usual environment—they are able to modify their cell shape to escape through the bloodstream and attach themselves to new tissues, starting the process of metastasis.

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