Key Points
Ablation of p57 in T cells blocks differentiation at an early developmental stage as a result of excessive activation of E2F.
Additional ablation of E2F1 or p53 normalizes p57-deficiency phenotypes, but loss of both p57 and p53 eventually results in thymic lymphoma.
Abstract
T cells are key components of the immune system, playing a central role in cell-mediated immunity. The sequential differentiation of T cells is associated with strict regulation of the cell cycle at each developmental stage. A balance between p53 activity and pre–T cell receptor (TCR) signaling regulates proliferation and differentiation decisions made by these cells. The relation between maintenance of this balance and the function of cell cycle regulators has remained largely unknown, however. We now show that mice with T cell–specific deficiency of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p57 manifest a differentiation block at the early stage of T cell maturation. Further genetic analysis showed that this defect is attributable to an imbalance between p53 activity and pre-TCR signaling caused by hyperactivation of the E2F-p53 pathway. Moreover, ablation of both p57 and p53 in T cells led to the development of aggressive thymic lymphomas with a reduced latency compared with that apparent for p53-deficient mice, whereas ablation of p57 alone did not confer susceptibility to this hematologic malignancy. Our results thus show that the p57-E2F-p53 axis plays a pivotal role in the proper development of T cells as well as in the prevention of lymphomagenesis.
Introduction
Development and maturation of T lymphocytes in the thymus are essential for establishment of the peripheral immune system. Most immature T cells in the thymus initially neither express CD4 nor CD8, and they are therefore referred to as double-negative (DN) cells. This DN population can be further divided into 4 subsets (DN1 to DN4) defined by the sequential pattern of expression of CD44 and CD25: CD44+CD25– (DN1), CD44+CD25+ (DN2), CD44–CD25+ (DN3), and CD44–CD25– (DN4).1 This maturation of T cells requires a sequence of events that is closely associated with rearrangement of the T-cell receptor (TCR) genes and signaling through this receptor. Activation of DN3 cells by pre-TCR–dependent signaling, referred to as the β-selection checkpoint, results in the generation of DN4 cells, which, in turn, differentiate into CD4+CD8+ (double-positive, or DP) cells via a transient CD8+ (immature single-positive, or ISP) stage.2 Subsequent downregulation of either CD4 or CD8 in DP cells gives rise to mature single-positive (SP) cells.3 Differentiation of DN3/DN4 cells into DP cells is blocked by a defect in pre-TCR signaling resulting from genetic ablation of RAG1 or RAG2, DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), or the CD3γ chain, and this block is prevented by concurrent loss of p53, suggesting that the β-selection checkpoint at the DN3 stage depends on a balance between pre-TCR signaling and p53 activation.4-6 The precise mechanism of such p53 activation remains largely unclear, however.
Progression of the cell cycle is controlled by pairs of cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs).7 CDKs normally inactivate the retinoblastoma protein (Rb) by hyperphosphorylation and thereby activate E2F transcription factors8 that play a key role in cell cycle progression by regulating the transcription of genes that contribute to this process.9 However, excessive E2F activity induces p53-dependent or p53-independent apoptosis in a manner dependent on cellular context.10-13
The activity of cyclin-CDK pairs is under the control of negative cell cycle regulators that belong to the Cip/Kip family of CDK inhibitors. Members of the Cip/Kip family, including p21Cip1 (p21), p27Kip1 (p27), and p57Kip2 (p57), mainly target CDK2 and CDK4 (and CDK1 in some situations) for inhibition.14 Among these members, p21 is dispensable for T-cell development.15 Loss of p27 in mice results in an increase in overall animal growth as well as the development of pituitary tumors and hyperplasia of multiple organs including the thymus.16-18 Unlike p21- or p27-deficient mice, mice lacking p57 die immediately after birth, manifesting severe developmental defects,12,19,20 which has hindered the functional characterization of p57-deficient T cells.
In the present study, we established mice in which the p57 gene is conditionally disrupted in T lymphocytes. We found that acute inactivation of p57 results in a differentiation block at the transition from DN3 to DN4 cells. Further genetic analysis showed that this block is attributable to hyperactivation of E2F1 and p53, suggesting that p57 deficiency disrupts the balance between p53 activity and pre-TCR signaling. Finally, we observed that additional ablation of p53 on the p57-null background resulted in the development of thymic lymphoma, indicating that the p57-p53 axis also functions as a suppressor of this fatal hematologic malignancy.
Methods
Generation of conditional knockout mice
Female mice heterozygous for a floxed p57 allele (p57[+]/F or p57[F]/+) were crossed with male Lck-Cre or CD4-Cre (kindly provided by C. B. Wilson, University of Washington, Seattle, WA) transgenic mice.21-23 Deletion of p57 in the resulting offspring was detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of genomic DNA with the primers AM83 (5′-ATGAGCGTCTGTTAGGGACAGAC-3′), AM84 (5′-GACCAGACAGTCGAAATGGTTCC-3′), and AM85 (5′-GCCGCGGTGTTGTTGAAACTG-3′). Lck-Cre/p57[+]/+ or CD4-Cre/p57[+]/+ mice were studied as controls for Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F or CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice, respectively. Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice were also crossed with E2f1−/− (kindly provided by L. Yamasaki, Columbia University, New York, NY) or p53−/− (Taconic, Hudson, NY) mice. The animal ethics committee of Kyushu University approved all mouse experiments.
Flow cytometry and cell sorting
Antibodies to mouse CD4 (RM4-5), CD8α (53-6.7), CD25 (3C7), CD44 (IM7), TCRβ (H57-597), B220 (RA3-6B2), TER119, Gr-1 (RB6-8C59), Mac-1 (M1/70), and NK1.1 (PK136) were obtained from BD Biosciences (San Jose, CA). CD4, CD8, B220, TER119, Gr-1, Mac-1, and NK1.1 were used as lineage markers. For determination of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation in vivo, mice were injected intraperitoneally with BrdU (1 mg) twice, with a 2-hour interval between injections. The thymus was harvested 1 hour after the second injection, and BrdU incorporation was evaluated with a BrdU Flow kit (BD Biosciences). For assay of apoptosis, thymocytes or splenic T cells were stained for cell surface markers, further incubated for 15 minutes with annexin V (BD Biosciences), and then analyzed by flow cytometry. For determination of intracellular TCRβ expression, cells were fixed in 2% paraformaldehyde after surface staining to determine thymocyte subsets, and they were then stained with antibodies to TCRβ in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 0.5% saponin and 4% fetal bovine serum. Stained cells were analyzed and sorted with the use of FACSCalibur or FACSAria instruments (BD Biosciences).
Statistical analysis
Quantitative data are presented as means ± standard deviation (SD) and were analyzed with the 2-tailed Student t test. A P value of < .05 was considered statistically significant.
Additional procedures can be found in the supplemental Methods (available on the Blood Web site).
Results
p57 deficiency in T cells results in developmental arrest at the DN3-DN4 transition
To investigate the role of p57 in T-cell differentiation, we set out to delete the p57 gene specifically in T cells. Given that the p57 locus undergoes genomic imprinting with only the maternal allele being expressed,24 we crossed female mice heterozygous for a floxed allele (p57[F]/+ or p57[+]/F, with the symbols within square brackets representing the imprinted, inactive allele) with male mice harboring a Cre transgene under the control of the Lck gene promoter to yield Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice, in which the maternal p57 allele would be expected to be deleted exclusively in the T-cell lineage. We confirmed that the floxed allele was indeed efficiently inactivated by Cre in T cells of these mice (Figure 1A).
The size and cell number for the thymus of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice were markedly reduced compared with those for control (Lck-Cre/p57[+]/+) mice (Figure 1B-C). Although the size of the spleen in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice did not differ substantially from that in control animals (Figure 1D), the number of TCRβ-positive cells in the spleen of the mutant mice was also reduced significantly compared with that in controls (Figure 1E). Flow cytometric analysis of the thymus of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice showed an increased proportion of DN cells and a reduced percentage of DP cells (Figure 1F). Further analysis of CD44 and CD25 expression in the DN subset showed an increase in the proportion of DN3 cells accompanied by a marked decrease in that of DN4 cells (Figure 1G), indicating that the transition from DN3 to DN4 was blocked by p57 ablation. This differentiation block in DN3 cells also reduced the absolute numbers of cells at later stages of differentiation (DN4, ISP, DP, CD4, or CD8 SP) in the mutant mice (Figure 1H).
To investigate the mechanism by which p57 deficiency results in the differentiation block at the DN3-DN4 transition, we examined DNA rearrangement at the TCRβ locus and the expression of pre-TCR components in the DN3 cell population, given that an increase in the percentage of DN3 cells is often observed as a result of a defect in β-selection. Analysis of genomic DNA for DJβ and V(D)Jβ rearrangement in DN3 cells showed no substantial differences between Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F and Lck-Cre/p57[+]/+ mice (Figure 1I), suggesting that the genomic rearrangement underlying TCRβ chain production is intact in the p57-deficient cells. The frequency of DN3 cells positive for intracellular TCRβ expression also did not differ significantly between the 2 genotypes (Figure 1J-K). However, the proportion of DN4 cells positive for intracellular TCRβ expression was greatly reduced by p57 ablation (Figure 1J-K), providing additional evidence that the differentiation of p57-deficient T cells is blocked at the DN3-DN4 transition. We also found that the abundance of pTα mRNA was increased in p57-deficient DN3 cells compared with control cells (Figure 1L), suggesting that the loss of p57 in immature T cells results in a reduction in the number of these cells without impairment of pre-TCR signaling.
Loss of p57 in immature T cells impairs proliferation and induces apoptosis in association with Rb hyperphosphorylation
Mice in which the gene encoding pTα is inactivated manifest a marked, but incomplete, block in T-cell development at the transition from DN3 to DN4, as shown by a decrease in the proportion of proliferating DN4 cells.25 Given that the timing of the differentiation block in p57-deficient T cells is almost identical to that in pTα-deficient mice, we examined the frequencies of proliferating cells and apoptotic cells among the DN3 and DN4 subsets in our mutant mice. Similar to the findings with pTα-deficient mice, the frequency of proliferating cells among the DN4 population of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice was markedly decreased compared with that for control mice, whereas that for p57-deficient DN3 cells was reduced to a lesser extent (Figure 2A-B). Furthermore, we found that the frequency of apoptosis in DN4 cells was increased by p57 ablation (Figure 2C-D). These results suggested that a combination of cell cycle arrest and induction of apoptosis is responsible for the developmental defect in p57-deficient T cells. The sum of these effects of p57 deficiency thus likely accounts for the ∼85% decrease in the number of DN4 cells in the mutant mice (Figure 1H).
We next investigated whether the Rb-E2F pathway is activated in p57-deficient T cells. Immunoblot (IB) analysis showed that the extent of Rb phosphorylation on Ser780 was increased in p57-deficient DN3 cells compared with control cells, whereas the extent of Rb phosphorylation at Ser807/811 did not differ substantially between the 2 genotypes (Figure 2E). Examination of the expression of E2F target genes revealed that the expression levels of the genes for Mcm3, Cdc6, and Cdt1, all of which are related to cell cycle progression, were significantly increased in p57-deficient DN3 cells (Figure 2F). In addition, expression of the genes for ATM and ASPP1, which are E2F targets involved in apoptosis, was also markedly increased in these cells (Figure 2G). These results thus indicated that E2F activity was indeed increased by ablation of p57 in T cells.
p57 is not required for T-cell development at the DP stage
We next examined whether p57 is also indispensable for the development of mature T cells. To bypass the requirement for p57 at the earlier stage of T-cell development, we crossed p57-floxed mice with CD4-Cre transgenic mice to generate CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice. Cre recombinase is not expressed in thymocytes of CD4-Cre mice until the late stage of DN cell development,23 and consistent with this we detected a significant decrease in the abundance of p57 mRNA in DN4 cells but not in DN3 cells from CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice (Figure 3A). The size of the thymus and number of thymocytes did not differ between these mutant mice and control animals (Figure 3B-C). The numbers of DN3, DN4, DP, CD4 SP, and CD8 SP cells in CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice were also similar to those in control littermates, whereas the number of ISP cells was increased in the mutant animals (Figure 3D-E). These results thus indicated that p57 is dispensable for T-cell development after the DP stage.
p57-deficient mature T cells proliferate inefficiently in response to antigenic stimulation
Although the number of T cells in the thymus of CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice did not differ significantly from that for control mice, the number of TCRβ-positive cells in the spleen of CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice was significantly reduced (Figure 3F). To investigate the mechanism underlying this phenotype, we first examined BrdU incorporation and apoptosis in splenic T cells after mitogenic stimulation. The extent of BrdU incorporation was attenuated in splenic T cells from CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice at 36 hours after the onset of stimulation with antibodies to CD3ε (Figure 3G). Furthermore, the frequency of apoptotic cells was increased in splenic T cells from CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice after stimulation for 24 or 36 hours (Figure 3H). These results thus suggested that p57 is indispensable for the continuous proliferation of mature T cells in response to mitogenic stimulation, which is necessary for maintenance of the T cell population in peripheral lymphoid organs.
We next examined the possible contribution of the Rb-E2F pathway to the impaired proliferation of mature T cells from CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice. Whereas the extent of Rb phosphorylation on Ser780 was not greatly increased by p57 ablation in the absence or presence of anti-CD3ε stimulation, the extent of that at Ser807/811 was increased in splenic T cells from CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice under both conditions (Figure 3I). This pattern of Rb phosphorylation on Ser807/811 and Ser780 is opposite to that apparent for p57-deficient immature T cells (Figure 2E). In addition, the expression levels of the genes for Cdc6 and Cdt1 were significantly increased in the p57-deficient mature T cells, although those for the Mcm3, ATM, and ASPP1 genes did not differ between the 2 genotypes (Figure 3J-K). This pattern of E2F target gene expression differs from that apparent in thymocytes (Figure 2F-G), possibly as a result of the difference in the sites of Rb phosphorylation. Collectively, our data suggested that the reduction in the number of TCRβ-positive cells in the spleen of CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice is attributable, at least in part, to excessive activation of the Rb-E2F pathway in response to antigenic stimulation and the resultant induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest.
Additional ablation of E2F1 attenuates the defects of p57-deficient T cells
Our results indicated that E2F activity is increased in both immature and mature T cells by ablation of p57. To examine whether the defects of p57-deficient T cells are indeed attributable to this activation of E2F, we crossed Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice with E2f1−/− mice to generate animals that lack both p57 and E2F1 in T cells. The decreases in the size of the thymus and the number of thymocytes in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice were partially reversed by additional ablation of E2F1 (Figure 4A-B). Flow cytometric analysis showed that E2F1 ablation also resulted in a partial rescue of the increase in the frequency of DN3 cells in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice (Figure 4C-D). This attenuation of the differentiation block at the DN3-DN4 transition led to a partial recovery of the absolute cell numbers of each thymocyte compartment in the p57/E2F1 double-mutant mice (Figure 4E).
In comparison with the partial rescue of defects apparent in p57-deficient thymocytes, additional E2F1 ablation almost completely reversed those in p57-deficient splenic T cells. The number of TCRβ-positive cells in the spleen of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice was thus restored to almost the same level as that of control animals by E2F1 ablation (Figure 4F). In addition, E2F1 deficiency completely reversed the changes in the extent of mitogen-induced BrdU incorporation and apoptosis in splenic T cells from Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice compared with those from control mice (Figure 4G-H). These results thus indicated that activation of the E2F pathway indeed contributes to the phenotypes of both p57-deficient immature and mature T cells and that the dependency of these phenotypes on such activation is greater in mature T cells than in immature T cells.
Additional ablation of p53 attenuates the phenotypes of p57 deficiency in immature but not mature T cells
Excessive activation of E2F was previously shown to induce p53-dependent or p53-independent apoptosis in a manner dependent on cellular context.10-13 Indeed, the abundance of mRNAs for p21, Noxa, and Bax, all of which are downstream targets of p53, was increased in DN3 cells of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice (Figure 5A). Furthermore, the abundance of all 3 mRNAs in DN3 cells of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/E2f1−/− mice was reduced compared with that for DN3 cells of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice (Figure 5A), although this reversal of p53 activation by E2F1 ablation was only partial. We therefore next crossed Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice with p53−/− mice to generate animals that lack both p57 and p53 in T cells. The size of the thymus in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice was indistinguishable from that in control mice, and we did not detect an increase in the frequency of DN3 cells in the double-mutant animals (Figure 5B-D). The cell numbers for each thymocyte subset in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice were also completely recovered by additional p53 ablation; in particular, the number of ISP cells in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice exceeded that in controls (Figure 5E). Collectively, these results suggested that the differentiation block at the DN3-DN4 transition induced by p57 loss is attributable to hyperactivation of p53.
We next examined whether p53 hyperactivation is also responsible for the defects of p57-deficient mature T cells. Whereas the decrease in the number of TCRβ-positive cells in the spleen of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice was completely reversed by the additional ablation of E2F1 (Figure 4F), the ablation of p53 did not reproduce this effect (Figure 6A). Consistent with this result, the abundance of mRNAs for p53 target genes, including those for p21, Noxa, and Bax, was not increased in splenic T cells of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice compared with those of control animals in the absence or presence of anti-CD3ε stimulation (Figure 6B). We also measured BrdU incorporation and the frequency of apoptosis after mitogenic stimulation, and found that additional depletion of p53 did not affect the phenotypes of p57-deficient splenic T cells (Figure 6C-D). Together, these results suggested that, in contrast to immature T cells, the induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest by p57 loss in mature T cells are p53 independent.
Given that activated E2F1 was previously shown to increase transcription of the caspase-8 and Bid genes, as well as to enhance Fas signaling in mature T cells,26 such effects might underlie the increased level of apoptosis in p57-deficient mature T cells. We therefore measured the abundance of mRNAs for caspase-8 and Bid in splenic CD3+ T cells from Lck-Cre/p57[+]/+ and Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice with or without anti-CD3ε stimulation. We found that the amounts of these mRNAs were indeed increased in CD3+ T cells of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice compared with the control cells after anti-CD3ε stimulation (Figure 6E), suggesting that the caspase-8–Bid pathway contributes to the phenotypes of p57-deficient mature T cells.
Loss of p57 predisposes immature T cells to thymic lymphoma
Given that our data suggested that p53 suppresses aberrant expansion of p57-deficient immature T cells, we examined whether the simultaneous loss of p57 and p53 might eventually result in tumorigenesis. At 8 weeks of age, some of Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice indeed developed aggressive lymphomas characterized by massive thymic enlargement (Figure 7A). In Figure 7A, 1 of the fastest developing lymphomas in Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice is shown. Flow cytometric analysis showed a marked increase in the size of the ISP cell population in the Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice (Figure 7B-C). All of the double-mutant mice died between 14 and 24 weeks of age, indicating that the lymphomas were fatal. Comparison of the timing of thymic lymphoma development demonstrated that the p57/p53 double-mutant mice developed this condition with a reduced latency compared with p53−/− mice, and that Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53+/− mice also exhibited a markedly reduced viability compared with p53+/− mice (Figure 7D). None of 13 Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F mice developed lymphoma for up to 500 days of age, supporting the notion that p53 suppresses aberrant expansion of p57-deficient T cells. We thus concluded that p57 and p53 cooperatively prevent excessive proliferation of T cells in the thymus and that disruption of this p57-p53 axis results in lymphomagenesis.
Discussion
Previous studies have indicated that the differentiation of DN3 cells into DN4 cells depends on the balance between p53 activity and pre-TCR signaling (Figure 7E upper left).4-6 Mice deficient in RAG1/2, DNA-PK, or CD3γ thus exhibit a differentiation block at the DN3 to DN4 stages that is attributable to impaired formation of the pre-TCR complex and consequent abrogation of pre-TCR signaling (Figure 7E upper center). On the other hand, mice deficient in p53 often develop lymphoma,27 supporting the notion that p53 activity is required for appropriate T-cell development (Figure 7E upper right). We have now shown that ablation of p57 induces p53 hyperactivation as a result of upregulation of E2F activity in thymocytes. Whereas genomic rearrangement at the TCRβ locus and intracellular expression of TCRβ in p57-deficient DN3 cells were indistinguishable from those in control cells, the abundance of pTα mRNA was increased in the p57-deficient DN3 cells, suggesting that the extent of pre-TCR signaling was also increased in these cells (Figure 7E lower left). However, p53 hyperactivation dominates this increased level of pre-TCR signaling, leading to a differentiation block at the DN3-DN4 transition.
Whereas additional ablation of E2F1 completely rescued the phenotypes of p57-deficient splenic T cells, the reversal of those of p57-deficient immature T cells by E2F1 ablation was partial (Figure 7E lower center). Given that previous studies indicate that other members of the E2F family, such as E2F2 or E2F3, also contribute to the maturation of immature T cells,28 activation of these other family members might be involved in the phenotypes of p57-deficient immature T cells.
Activated E2F promotes cell cycle progression by increasing the transcription of genes that contribute to the G1-S transition.8 E2F also promotes transcription of apoptosis-related genes, including those for ATM and ASPP1 that induce apoptosis through activation of p53.29,30 Consistent with these findings, we found that the amounts of ATM and ASPP1 mRNAs as well as those of mRNAs derived from p53 target genes were increased in p57-deficient immature T cells in association with an increase in the frequency of apoptosis (Figure 7E lower left). Furthermore, additional ablation of p53 rescued p57-deficiency phenotypes in immature T cells, suggesting that the reduction in the number of these cells elicited by p57 ablation is attributable to p53-dependent cell cycle arrest and induction of apoptosis. Our data show that the predominant response to p53 activation in p57-deficient immature T cells is cell cycle arrest, although the mechanism by which a cell selects cell cycle arrest or apoptosis as the appropriate response to p53 activation remains elusive.
We found that the number of ISP cells in CD4-Cre/p57[+]/F mice and Lck-Cre/p57[+]/F/p53−/− mice is even greater than that in corresponding control mice (Figures 3E and 5E), suggesting that loss of p57 may promote E2F-driven cell proliferation in ISP cells to a greater extent than in other T-cell fractions. Consistent with this notion, p57/p53 double-mutant mice eventually develop fatal thymic lymphomas characterized by accumulation of ISP cells (Figure 7E lower right). Ablation of p57 alone did not confer an increased susceptibility to lymphoma development, suggesting that p53 suppresses such development in the context of p57 deficiency. In conclusion, our study has unveiled the physiological importance of the p57-E2F-p53 pathway in the proper development of T cells as well as in the prevention of lymphomagenesis, with our results providing the basis for a new paradigm in the relation between CDK inhibitors, development of the immune system, and lymphomagenesis.
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
There is an Inside Blood Commentary on this article in this issue.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank C. B. Wilson for CD4-Cre mice, L. Yamasaki for E2f1−/− mice, A. Niihara, C. Mitai, and M. Tanaka for technical assistance, and members of our laboratory for comments on the manuscript.
Authorship
Contribution: A.M. and S.T. performed experiments and wrote the manuscript; and K.I.N. designed research, interpreted data, and wrote the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
The current affiliation for A.M. is the Cancer Genetics Program, Beth Israel Deaconess Cancer Center, Departments of Medicine and Pathology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215.
Correspondence: Keiichi I. Nakayama, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University, 3-1-1 Maidashi, Higashi-ku, Fukuoka, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan; e-mail: nakayak1@bioreg.kyushu-u.ac.jp.
References
Author notes
A.M. and S.T. contributed equally to this study.
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