Literature DB >> 24645771

Inactivation of MYC reverses tumorigenesis.

Y Li1, S C Casey, D W Felsher.   

Abstract

The MYC proto-oncogene is an essential regulator of many normal biological programmes. MYC, when activated as an oncogene, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of most types of human cancers. MYC overexpression in normal cells is restrained from causing cancer through multiple genetically and epigenetically controlled checkpoint mechanisms, including proliferative arrest, apoptosis and cellular senescence. When pathologically activated in the correct epigenetic and genetic contexts, MYC bypasses these mechanisms and drives many of the 'hallmark' features of cancer, including uncontrolled tumour growth associated with DNA replication and transcription, cellular proliferation and growth, protein synthesis and altered cellular metabolism. MYC also dictates tumour cell fate by enforcing self-renewal and by abrogating cellular senescence and differentiation programmes. Moreover, MYC influences the tumour microenvironment, including activating angiogenesis and suppressing the host immune response. Provocatively, brief or even partial suppression of MYC back to its physiological levels of activation can lead to the restoration of intrinsic checkpoint mechanisms, resulting in acute and sustained tumour regression associated with tumour cells undergoing proliferative arrest, differentiation, senescence and apoptosis, as well as remodelling of the tumour microenvironment, recruitment of an immune response and shutdown of angiogenesis. Hence, tumours appear to be addicted to the MYC oncogene because of both tumour cell intrinsic and host-dependent mechanisms. MYC is important for the regulation of both the initiation and maintenance of tumorigenesis.
© 2014 The Association for the Publication of the Journal of Internal Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MYC Oncogene; oncogene addiction; targeted therapeutics; transgenic mouse models

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24645771      PMCID: PMC4065197          DOI: 10.1111/joim.12237

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Intern Med        ISSN: 0954-6820            Impact factor:   8.989


  116 in total

1.  Defective double-strand DNA break repair and chromosomal translocations by MYC overexpression.

Authors:  Asa Karlsson; Debabrita Deb-Basu; Athena Cherry; Stephanie Turner; James Ford; Dean W Felsher
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-08-08       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  A Myc-induced apoptosis pathway surfaces.

Authors:  D R Green
Journal:  Science       Date:  1997-11-14       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 3.  Tumor dormancy and MYC inactivation: pushing cancer to the brink of normalcy.

Authors:  Catherine M Shachaf; Dean W Felsher
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2005-06-01       Impact factor: 12.701

4.  Genetic alteration of the c-myc protooncogene (MYC) in human primary breast carcinomas.

Authors:  C Escot; C Theillet; R Lidereau; F Spyratos; M H Champeme; J Gest; R Callahan
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1986-07       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Immunology in the clinic review series; focus on cancer: multiple roles for the immune system in oncogene addiction.

Authors:  P Bachireddy; K Rakhra; D W Felsher
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 4.330

Review 6.  Retroviral insertional mutagenesis: tagging cancer pathways.

Authors:  Harald Mikkers; Anton Berns
Journal:  Adv Cancer Res       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 6.242

7.  Reversible tumorigenesis by MYC in hematopoietic lineages.

Authors:  D W Felsher; J M Bishop
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 17.970

Review 8.  Does the ribosome translate cancer?

Authors:  Davide Ruggero; Pier Paolo Pandolfi
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 60.716

Review 9.  Apoptotic signaling by c-MYC.

Authors:  B Hoffman; D A Liebermann
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2008-10-27       Impact factor: 9.867

10.  High-throughput retroviral tagging to identify components of specific signaling pathways in cancer.

Authors:  Harald Mikkers; John Allen; Puck Knipscheer; Like Romeijn; Augustinus Hart; Edwin Vink; Anton Berns; Lieke Romeyn
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2002-08-19       Impact factor: 38.330

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  23 in total

1.  miR-17-92 explains MYC oncogene addiction.

Authors:  Yulin Li; Stephanie C Casey; Peter S Choi; Dean W Felsher
Journal:  Mol Cell Oncol       Date:  2014-12-31

2.  Bromodomain and extra-terminal motif (BET) inhibition is synthetic lethal with loss of SMAD4 in colorectal cancer cells via restoring the loss of MYC repression.

Authors:  Changxiang Shi; Eun Ju Yang; Yifan Liu; Pui Kei Mou; Guowen Ren; Joong Sup Shim
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2020-12-08       Impact factor: 9.867

3.  MYC oncogene elicits tumorigenesis associated with embryonic, ribosomal biogenesis, and tissue-lineage dedifferentiation gene expression changes.

Authors:  Delaney K Sullivan; Anja Deutzmann; Josiah Yarbrough; Maya S Krishnan; Arvin M Gouw; David I Bellovin; Stacey J Adam; Daniel F Liefwalker; Renumathy Dhanasekaran; Dean W Felsher
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2022-10-07       Impact factor: 8.756

4.  Co-expression patterns explain how a basic transcriptional role for MYC modulates Wnt and MAPK pathways in colon and lung adenocarcinomas.

Authors:  Melanie Haas Kucherlapati
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2022-04-19       Impact factor: 5.173

Review 5.  MYC protein interactors in gene transcription and cancer.

Authors:  Diana Resetca; Cornelia Redel; Corey Lourenco; Peter Lin; Alannah S MacDonald; Roberto Ciaccio; Tristan M G Kenney; Yong Wei; David W Andrews; Maria Sunnerhagen; Cheryl H Arrowsmith; Brian Raught; Linda Z Penn
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2021-06-29       Impact factor: 60.716

6.  Molecular biology of gynecological cancer.

Authors:  Kenzo Sonoda
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2015-11-05       Impact factor: 2.967

Review 7.  Tumor reversion: a dream or a reality.

Authors:  Avantika Tripathi; Anjali Kashyap; Greesham Tripathi; Joni Yadav; Rakhi Bibban; Nikita Aggarwal; Kulbhushan Thakur; Arun Chhokar; Mohit Jadli; Ashok Kumar Sah; Yeshvandra Verma; Hatem Zayed; Amjad Husain; Alok Chandra Bharti; Manoj Kumar Kashyap
Journal:  Biomark Res       Date:  2021-05-06

8.  MYC Drives Group 3 Medulloblastoma through Transformation of Sox2+ Astrocyte Progenitor Cells.

Authors:  Ran Tao; Najiba Murad; Zhenhua Xu; Peng Zhang; Konstantin Okonechnikov; Marcel Kool; Samuel Rivero-Hinojosa; Christopher Lazarski; Pan Zheng; Yang Liu; Charles G Eberhart; Brian R Rood; Roger Packer; Yanxin Pei
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2019-03-12       Impact factor: 13.312

9.  Direct inhibition of c-Myc-Max heterodimers by celastrol and celastrol-inspired triterpenoids.

Authors:  Huabo Wang; Peter Teriete; Angela Hu; Dhanya Raveendra-Panickar; Kelsey Pendelton; John S Lazo; Julie Eiseman; Toril Holien; Kristine Misund; Ganna Oliynyk; Marie Arsenian-Henriksson; Nicholas D P Cosford; Anders Sundan; Edward V Prochownik
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2015-10-20

Review 10.  Autophagy-Related Deubiquitinating Enzymes Involved in Health and Disease.

Authors:  Fouzi El Magraoui; Christina Reidick; Hemut E Meyer; Harald W Platta
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2015-10-05       Impact factor: 6.600

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