The JAK-STAT Pathway: Impact on Human Disease and Therapeutic Intervention

John J. O’Shea(National Institutes of Health), Daniella M. Schwartz(National Institutes of Health), Alejandro V. Villarino(National Institutes of Health), Massimo Gadina(National Institutes of Health), Iain B. McInnes(National Institutes of Health), Arian Laurence(National Institutes of Health)
Annual Review of Medicine
January 14, 2015
Cited by 1,560Open Access
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Abstract

The Janus kinase (JAK)-signal transducer of activators of transcription (STAT) pathway is now recognized as an evolutionarily conserved signaling pathway employed by diverse cytokines, interferons, growth factors, and related molecules. This pathway provides an elegant and remarkably straightforward mechanism whereby extracellular factors control gene expression. It thus serves as a fundamental paradigm for how cells sense environmental cues and interpret these signals to regulate cell growth and differentiation. Genetic mutations and polymorphisms are functionally relevant to a variety of human diseases, especially cancer and immune-related conditions. The clinical relevance of the pathway has been confirmed by the emergence of a new class of therapeutics that targets JAKs.


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