| Literature DB >> 33531470 |
Tiziano Bernasocchi1,2, Geniver El Tekle1,2, Marco Bolis1, Azzurra Mutti1, Arianna Vallerga1, Laura P Brandt3, Filippo Spriano1,2, Tanya Svinkina4, Marita Zoma1,2, Valentina Ceserani1, Anna Rinaldi1, Hana Janouskova1, Daniela Bossi1, Manuela Cavalli1, Simone Mosole1, Roger Geiger5, Ze Dong6, Cai-Guang Yang6, Domenico Albino1, Andrea Rinaldi1, Peter Schraml7, Simon Linder8, Giuseppina M Carbone1, Andrea Alimonti1, Francesco Bertoni1, Holger Moch7, Steven A Carr4, Wilbert Zwart8, Marianna Kruithof-de Julio9,10, Mark A Rubin3, Namrata D Udeshi4, Jean-Philippe P Theurillat11.
Abstract
Driver genes with a mutually exclusive mutation pattern across tumor genomes are thought to have overlapping roles in tumorigenesis. In contrast, we show here that mutually exclusive prostate cancer driver alterations involving the ERG transcription factor and the ubiquitin ligase adaptor SPOP are synthetic sick. At the molecular level, the incompatible cancer pathways are driven by opposing functions in SPOP. ERG upregulates wild type SPOP to dampen androgen receptor (AR) signaling and sustain ERG activity through degradation of the bromodomain histone reader ZMYND11. Conversely, SPOP-mutant tumors stabilize ZMYND11 to repress ERG-function and enable oncogenic androgen receptor signaling. This dichotomy regulates the response to therapeutic interventions in the AR pathway. While mutant SPOP renders tumor cells susceptible to androgen deprivation therapies, ERG promotes sensitivity to high-dose androgen therapy and pharmacological inhibition of wild type SPOP. More generally, these results define a distinct class of antagonistic cancer drivers and a blueprint toward their therapeutic exploitation.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33531470 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20820-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919