- Lui, Vivian Wai Yan;
- Peyser, Noah D;
- Ng, Patrick Kwok-Shing;
- Hritz, Jozef;
- Zeng, Yan;
- Lu, Yiling;
- Li, Hua;
- Wang, Lin;
- Gilbert, Breean R;
- General, Ignacio J;
- Bahar, Ivet;
- Ju, Zhenlin;
- Wang, Zhenghe;
- Pendleton, Kelsey P;
- Xiao, Xiao;
- Du, Yu;
- Vries, John K;
- Hammerman, Peter S;
- Garraway, Levi A;
- Mills, Gordon B;
- Johnson, Daniel E;
- Grandis, Jennifer R
The underpinnings of STAT3 hyperphosphorylation resulting in enhanced signaling and cancer progression are incompletely understood. Loss-of-function mutations of enzymes that dephosphorylate STAT3, such as receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases, which are encoded by the PTPR gene family, represent a plausible mechanism of STAT3 hyperactivation. We analyzed whole exome sequencing (n = 374) and reverse-phase protein array data (n = 212) from head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs). PTPR mutations are most common and are associated with significantly increased phospho-STAT3 expression in HNSCC tumors. Expression of receptor-like protein tyrosine phosphatase T (PTPRT) mutant proteins induces STAT3 phosphorylation and cell survival, consistent with a "driver" phenotype. Computational modeling reveals functional consequences of PTPRT mutations on phospho-tyrosine-substrate interactions. A high mutation rate (30%) of PTPRs was found in HNSCC and 14 other solid tumors, suggesting that PTPR alterations, in particular PTPRT mutations, may define a subset of patients where STAT3 pathway inhibitors hold particular promise as effective therapeutic agents.