| Literature DB >> 29593330 |
Junchao Cai1, Rong Li2, Xiaonan Xu1,3,4, Le Zhang1,3, Rong Lian1,3, Lishan Fang5, Yongbo Huang6, Xianming Feng1,3, Ximeng Liu1,3, Xu Li1,3, Xun Zhu1,3, Heng Zhang7, Jueheng Wu1,3, Musheng Zeng8, Erwei Song9, Yukai He10, Yuxin Yin11, Jun Li12, Mengfeng Li13,14.
Abstract
The contribution of autophagy to cancer development remains controversial, largely owing to the fact that autophagy can be tumour suppressive or oncogenic in different biological contexts. Here, we show that in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), casein kinase 1 alpha 1 (CK1α) suppresses tumour growth by functioning as an autophagy inducer to activate an autophagy-regulating, tumour-suppressive PTEN/AKT/FOXO3a/Atg7 axis. Specifically, CK1α bound the C-terminal tail of PTEN and enhanced both PTEN stability and activity by competitively antagonizing NEDD4-1-induced PTEN polyubiquitination and abrogating PTEN phosphorylation, thereby inhibiting AKT activity and activating FOXO3a-induced transcription of Atg7. Notably, blocking CK1α-induced Atg7-dependent autophagy cooperates with oncogenic HRasV12 to initiate tumorigenesis of lung epithelial cells. An association of a CK1α-modulated autophagic program with the anti-neoplastic activities of the CK1α/PTEN/FOXO3a/Atg7 axis was demonstrated in xenografted tumour models and human NSCLC specimens. This provides insights into the biological and potentially clinical significance of autophagy in NSCLC.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29593330 DOI: 10.1038/s41556-018-0065-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824