| Literature DB >> 33767157 |
Zsuzsanna Nagy1,2, Janith A Seneviratne1, Maxwell Kanikevich1, William Chang1, Chelsea Mayoh1,2, Pooja Venkat1, Yanhua Du3, Cizhong Jiang3, Alice Salib1, Jessica Koach1, Daniel R Carter1,2,4, Rituparna Mittra1, Tao Liu1, Michael W Parker5,6, Belamy B Cheung7,8,9, Glenn M Marshall10,11,12.
Abstract
To achieve the very high oncoprotein levels required to drive the malignant state cancer cells utilise the ubiquitin proteasome system to upregulate transcription factor levels. Here our analyses identify ALYREF, expressed from the most common genetic copy number variation in neuroblastoma, chromosome 17q21-ter gain as a key regulator of MYCN protein turnover. We show strong co-operativity between ALYREF and MYCN from transgenic models of neuroblastoma in vitro and in vivo. The two proteins form a nuclear coactivator complex which stimulates transcription of the ubiquitin specific peptidase 3, USP3. We show that increased USP3 levels reduce K-48- and K-63-linked ubiquitination of MYCN, thus driving up MYCN protein stability. In the MYCN-ALYREF-USP3 signal, ALYREF is required for MYCN effects on the malignant phenotype and that of USP3 on MYCN stability. This data defines a MYCN oncoprotein dependency state which provides a rationale for future pharmacological studies.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33767157 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22143-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919