| Literature DB >> 23712866 |
Xavier Jacq1, Mark Kemp, Niall M B Martin, Stephen P Jackson.
Abstract
Covalent post-translational modification of proteins by ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like factors has emerged as a general mechanism to regulate myriad intra-cellular processes. The addition and removal of ubiquitin or ubiquitin-like proteins from factors has recently been demonstrated as a key mechanism to modulate DNA damage response (DDR) pathways. It is thus, timely to evaluate the potential for ubiquitin pathway enzymes as DDR drug targets for therapeutic intervention. The synthetic lethal approach provides exciting opportunities for the development of targeted therapies to treat cancer: most tumours have lost critical DDR pathways, and thus rely more heavily on the remaining pathways, while normal tissues are still equipped with all DDR pathways. Here, we review key deubiquitylating enzymes (DUBs) involved in DDR pathways, and describe how targeting DUBs may lead to selective therapies to treat cancer patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23712866 PMCID: PMC3756857 DOI: 10.1007/s12013-013-9635-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biochem Biophys ISSN: 1085-9195 Impact factor: 2.194
Fig. 1Synthetic lethality relationships. The process of loss of DDR pathways during tumorigenesis is depicted here, and summarises the critical differences between normal and tumour cells. Cancer is in part driven by changes in a cell’s DNA repair capacity and DDR. Inhibiting these pathways can selectively kill cancer cells through a process called synthetic lethality
Fig. 2DUB phylogenetic tree. Approximately 100 genes belong to the DUB family of peptidases. Six classes of DUBs have been identified so far in the human genome. Five families belong to the cysteine peptidase class: the ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolases (UCH); the ubiquitin-specific proteases (USPs); the SENPs or SUMO peptidases; the OTU and the MJD. In addition, the MPN+/JAMM family belongs to the metallo-peptidases class of enzymes. The phylogenetic tree represents only human DUBs and does not cover bacterial or viral DUBs that display additional levels of divergence
Fig. 3DUBs involved in DNA damage responses. DUBs involved in the DDR can be classified according to their substrates or interaction partners and artificially grouped into DUBs directly interfering with the response to DNA damage at sites of damage, or DUBs that regulate the activities of key DDR proteins involved in the cellular response to the DNA insult
Fig. 4DUBs are involved in all DDR pathways. A picture is now emerging of the fine control that certain DUBs play in all DNA repair processes of a cell. By identifying these DUBs and through their selective inhibition certain DDR pathways can be targeted in cancer cells
The table lists DUBs that have been reported to be involved in the DNA damage response and checkpoint activities
| DUB | Interaction partner or substrate | DDR pathway | Sensitisation | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USP1 | FANCD2, PCNA, UAF1, Elg1, pol K, ID1, ID2 | TLS, FA | PARP inhibitor, MMC, camptothecin, | Nijman et al. [ |
| USP2a | FAS, Mdm2, Mdmx | Checkpoint | Cisplatin, paclitaxel | Priolo et al. [ |
| USP3 | Histone H2A | DSB | IR | Nicassio et al. [ |
| USP4 | ARF-BP1 | Checkpoint | IR, doxorubicin | Liang et al. [ |
| USP5 | p53 | Checkpoint | ND | Dayal et al. [ |
| USP7 | mdm2, p53, FOXO4, chromatin | BER, NER, HR | UV, HU, IR, etoposide. H2O2 | Schwertman et al. [ |
| USP9x | MCL1 | BER. MMR | IR, 5FU | Harris et al. [ |
| USP10 | p53, beclin | DSB | IR | Yuan et al. [ |
| USP11 | Histone H2A, PRC1, BRCA2 | DSB | IR, PARP inhibitor, MMC | Schoenfeld et al. [ |
| USP16 | Histone H2A | DSB | ND | Shanbhag et al. [ |
| USP24 | DDB2 | NER | CPD | Zhang et al. [ |
| USP28 | 53BP1, Myc | HR, checkpoint | HU, UV, IR | Zhang et al. [ |
| USP29 | p53 | Checkpoint | H2O2 | Liu et al. [ |
| USP44 | ND | Checkpoint | ND | Zhang et al. [ |
| USP47 | Polymerase β | BER | MMS, UV | Parsons et al. [ |
| UCHL1 | p53 | Checkpoint | ND | Xiang et al. [ |
| BRCC36 | BRCA1, BRCA2, RAD51, RAP80 | HR | IR | Dong 2003, Wang 2007, Shao 2008, Feng 2009, Shao et al. [ |
| MYSM1 | Histone H2A | Genomic stability, DSB | ND | Zhu et al. [ |
| PSMD14 | K63 Ub chains, 26S proteasome | HR | IR, HU | Butler et al. [ |
| OTUB1 | UBC13, UBCH5 | DSB | Etoposide. UV, 5FU | Sun et al. [ |
| BPLF1 | PCNA | TLS | UV, HU | Whitehurst et al. [ |
| SENP1 | KAP1 | DSB | UV, doxorubicin | Li et al. [ |
| SENP2 | NEMO, Mdm2 | Etoposide, UV | NER, checkpoint, | Lee et al. [ |
| SENP6 | RPA | HR | Camptothecin | Dou et al. [ |
Key interaction partners or substrates are summarised as well as the pathways in which each DUB has been described to be involved in. In addition, chemotherapeutic agents known to sensitise tumours cells depleted or over-expressing DUBs along with key references for supporting data are listed. Summary of DUBs involved in the DDR
ND Not determined