| Literature DB >> 28093285 |
Rui Liu1, Jiajia Tang1, Chaodong Ding1, Weicheng Liang1, Li Zhang1, Tianke Chen1, Yan Xiong1, Xiaowei Dai1, Wenfeng Li2, Yunsheng Xu2, Jin Hu1, Liting Lu1, Wanqin Liao1, Xincheng Lu3.
Abstract
Ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) protein kinase is a major guardian of genomic stability, and its well-established function in cancer is tumor suppression. Here, we report an oncogenic role of ATM. Using two isogenic sets of human colon cancer cell lines that differed only in their ATM status, we demonstrated that ATM deficiency significantly inhibits cancer cell proliferation, migration, and invasion. The tumor-suppressive function of ATM depletion is not modulated by the compensatory activation of ATR, but it is associated with B56γ2-mediated Chk1/p53/CD44 signaling pathways. Under normal growth conditions, the depletion of ATM prevents B56γ2 ubiquitination and degradation, which activates PP2A-mediated Chk1/p53/p21 signaling pathways, leading to senescence and cell cycle arrest. CD44 was validated as a novel ATM target based on its ability to rescue cell migration and invasion defects in ATM-depleted cells. The activation of p53 induced by ATM depletion suppresses CD44 transcription, thus resulting in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and cell migration suppression. Our study suggests that ATM has tumorigenic potential in post-formed colon neoplasia, and it supports ATM as an appealing target for improving cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: ATM; B56γ2; CD44; Colon cancer; Tumorigenic potential
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28093285 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2016.12.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679