A Catalytically Inactive Protein Kinase C alpha Mutation Drives Chordoid Glioma by Pathway Rewiring

催化失活的蛋白激酶Cα突变通过通路重连驱动脊索样胶质瘤的发生

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Abstract

Chordoid glioma (ChG) is a rare, low-grade brain tumor characterized by a novel recurrent point mutation, D463H, in the kinase domain of protein kinase C alpha (PKCα). The mutation is invariably an Asp to His substitution, suggesting it endows a unique function beyond catalytic inactivation associated with other cancer-associated PKCα mutations. Here we use in vitro and in cellulo activity assays to show that PKCα (D463H) is catalytically inactive, functions as a dominant-negative mutant to suppress endogenous PKC and uniquely rewires the cellular interactome. Specifically, phosphoproteomic, proximity labeling, and co-immunoprecipitation mass-spectrometry data from cells overexpressing PKCα (D463H) identify altered phosphorylation of substrates and binding to multiple proteins involved in cell-cell junctions compared to WT enzyme. Lastly, single nuclei RNAseq reveals that ChG derives from specialized tanycytes. Our data suggest that this disease-defining, fully penetrant mutation promotes neomorphic non-catalytic scaffolding to impair cell junction function.

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