Single Protein Mimics Retinoic Acid Therapy to Help Leukemia Cells Mature
Mar 26, 2025
A groundbreaking discovery reveals the FGR protein's surprising ability to help leukemia cells mature, echoing the effects of retinoic acid therapy. Traditionally seen as a cancer promoter, FGR's new role opens exciting possibilities for treating acute myeloid leukemia. The research shows that simply introducing FGR prompts the cells to produce key maturation markers and shifts their behavior. This innovative finding could pave the way for novel therapies, especially for cases resistant to conventional treatments.
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FGR Protein's Role in Leukemia Cell Maturation
FGR protein, typically cancer-promoting, can mature leukemia cells, similar to retinoic acid (RA).
This finding offers a potential new treatment path for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and related cancers.
insights INSIGHT
FGR and the "Signalsome"
FGR activates the "signalsome," a protein group usually triggered by RA, promoting cell differentiation.
In RA-resistant cells, FGR didn't induce maturation, suggesting other signaling issues hinder both pathways.
insights INSIGHT
FGR's Potential as an Anti-Cancer Agent
This challenges FGR's traditional role as solely cancer-driving, showing potential anti-cancer behavior.
FGR mimicking RA's complex effects is promising for AML and other blood cancer therapies.
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BUFFALO, NY - March 31, 2025 – A new #research paper was #published in Oncotarget, Volume 16, on March 21, 2025, titled “FGR Src family kinase causes signaling and phenotypic shift mimicking retinoic acid-induced differentiation of leukemic cells."
A research team led by first author Noor Kazim and corresponding author Andrew Yen from Cornell University discovered that the FGR protein—traditionally considered a cancer-promoting molecule—can instead trigger leukemia cells to mature. This effect mirrors the response usually induced by retinoic acid (RA); a compound derived from vitamin A that is widely used in cancer therapy. Their finding presents a potential new path for therapies targeting acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and related cancers.
Acute myeloid leukemia is often treated using RA-based therapies that force immature white blood cells to mature, slowing their rapid growth. Retinoic acid works through complex signaling and gene regulation involving a group of proteins that orchestrate this transformation. In this study, the team used HL-60 cells, a model for human leukemia, and engineered them to express FGR. Surprisingly, the presence of FGR alone was enough to make these cells mature in a way almost identical to what happens with RA treatment. They began producing well-known markers of maturation such as CD38 and CD11b, generated reactive oxygen species (ROS), and expressed the inhibitor of the cell cycle, p27, all signs that the cells had shifted from a cancer-like, fast-dividing state to a more specialized, mature form.
Further analysis revealed that FGR activated a group of proteins known as the "signalsome," which helps trigger the changes needed for cells to differentiate. This same group is typically activated by RA.
“Notably, FGR induces the expression of genes targeted by RAR/RXR, such as cd38 and blr1, even without RA."
To test its potential use in treatment-resistant leukemias, the researchers introduced FGR into RA-resistant HL-60 cells. In these, FGR did not cause the same maturation process, which suggests that there are other problems with cell signaling that stop both the RA and FGR pathways. This result highlights the complexity of resistance mechanisms and the need for additional research.
These findings challenge the traditional view of FGR as strictly a cancer-driving protein. Instead, in this specific context, it appears to initiate anti-cancer behavior. That a single protein can reproduce the effects of a complex therapeutic compound like RA is both surprising and promising. If future research confirms this study's results in more advanced models, FGR could become a new tool for developing therapies for AML and potentially other blood cancers.
DOI - https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28705
Correspondence to - Andrew Yen - ay13@cornell.edu
Video short - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2fjeFFoUPQ
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About Oncotarget
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