| Literature DB >> 29339491 |
Yan Geng1,2, Wojciech Michowski1,2, Joel M Chick3, Yaoyu E Wang4, M Emmanuelle Jecrois1,2, Katharine E Sweeney1,2, Lijun Liu1,2, Richard C Han1,2, Nan Ke1,2, Agnieszka Zagozdzon1,2, Ewa Sicinska5, Roderick T Bronson6, Steven P Gygi3, Piotr Sicinski7,2.
Abstract
E-type cyclins (cyclins E1 and E2) are components of the core cell cycle machinery and are overexpressed in many human tumor types. E cyclins are thought to drive tumor cell proliferation by activating the cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). The cyclin E1 gene represents the site of recurrent integration of the hepatitis B virus in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma, and this event is associated with strong up-regulation of cyclin E1 expression. Regardless of the underlying mechanism of tumorigenesis, the majority of liver cancers overexpress E-type cyclins. Here we used conditional cyclin E knockout mice and a liver cancer model to test the requirement for the function of E cyclins in liver tumorigenesis. We show that a ubiquitous, global shutdown of E cyclins did not visibly affect postnatal development or physiology of adult mice. However, an acute ablation of E cyclins halted liver cancer progression. We demonstrated that also human liver cancer cells critically depend on E cyclins for proliferation. In contrast, we found that the function of the cyclin E catalytic partner, CDK2, is dispensable in liver cancer cells. We observed that E cyclins drive proliferation of tumor cells in a CDK2- and kinase-independent mechanism. Our study suggests that compounds which degrade or inhibit cyclin E might represent a highly selective therapeutic strategy for patients with liver cancer, as these compounds would selectively cripple proliferation of tumor cells, while sparing normal tissues.Entities:
Keywords: E-type cyclins; cell cycle; cyclin-dependent kinase CDK2; liver cancer
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29339491 PMCID: PMC5798328 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1711477115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205