IKK{gamma} protein is a target of BAG3 regulatory activity in human tumor growth

BAG3, a member of the BAG family of heat shock protein (HSP) 70 cochaperones, is expressed in response to stressful stimuli in a number of normal cell types and constitutively in a variety of tumors, including pancreas carcinomas, lymphocytic and myeloblastic leukemias, and thyroid carcinomas. Down-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2010-04, Vol.107 (16), p.7497-7502
Hauptverfasser: Ammirante, Massimo, Rosati, Alessandra, Arra, Claudio, Basile, Anna, Falco, Antonia, Festa, Michela, Pascale, Maria, d'Avenia, Morena, Marzullo, Liberato, Belisario, Maria Antonietta, De Marco, Margot, Barbieri, Antonio, Giudice, Aldo, Chiappetta, Gennaro, Vuttariello, Emilia, Monaco, Mario, Bonelli, Patrizia, Salvatore, Gaetano, Di Benedetto, Maria, Deshmane, Satish L, Khalili, Kamel, Turco, Maria Caterina, Leone, Arturo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BAG3, a member of the BAG family of heat shock protein (HSP) 70 cochaperones, is expressed in response to stressful stimuli in a number of normal cell types and constitutively in a variety of tumors, including pancreas carcinomas, lymphocytic and myeloblastic leukemias, and thyroid carcinomas. Down-regulation of BAG3 results in cell death, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are still elusive. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanism of BAG3-dependent survival in human osteosarcoma (SAOS-2) and melanoma (M14) cells. We show that bag3 overexpression in tumors promotes survival through the NF-kappaB pathway. Indeed, we demonstrate that BAG3 alters the interaction between HSP70 and IKKgamma, increasing availability of IKKgamma and protecting it from proteasome-dependent degradation; this, in turn, results in increased NF-kappaB activity and survival. These results identify bag3 as a potential target for anticancer therapies in those tumors in which this gene is constitutively expressed. As a proof of principle, we show that treatment of a mouse xenograft tumor model with bag3siRNA-adenovirus that down-regulates bag3 results in reduced tumor growth and increased animal survival.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0907696107