The stress kinase MKK7 couples oncogenic stress to p53 stability and tumor suppression

Josef Penninger and colleagues show that deletion of the stress kinase MKK7 in mouse models of lung and mammary tumors accelerates tumor onset and reduces overall survival. The study suggests that MKK7 is a sensor of oncogenic stress. Most preneoplastic lesions are quiescent and do not progress to f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature genetics 2011-03, Vol.43 (3), p.212-219
Hauptverfasser: Penninger, Josef M, Schramek, Daniel, Kotsinas, Athanassios, Meixner, Arabella, Wada, Teiji, Elling, Ulrich, Pospisilik, J Andrew, Neely, G Gregory, Zwick, Ralf-Harun, Sigl, Verena, Forni, Guido, Serrano, Manuel, Gorgoulis, Vassilis G
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Josef Penninger and colleagues show that deletion of the stress kinase MKK7 in mouse models of lung and mammary tumors accelerates tumor onset and reduces overall survival. The study suggests that MKK7 is a sensor of oncogenic stress. Most preneoplastic lesions are quiescent and do not progress to form overt tumors. It has been proposed that oncogenic stress activates the DNA damage response and the key tumor suppressor p53, which prohibits tumor growth. However, the molecular pathways by which cells sense a premalignant state in vivo are largely unknown. Here we report that tissue-specific inactivation of the stress signaling kinase MKK7 in KRas G12D -driven lung carcinomas and NeuT-driven mammary tumors markedly accelerates tumor onset and reduces overall survival. Mechanistically, MKK7 acts through the kinases JNK1 and JNK2, and this signaling pathway directly couples oncogenic and genotoxic stress to the stability of p53, which is required for cell cycle arrest and suppression of epithelial cancers. These results show that MKK7 functions as a major tumor suppressor in lung and mammary cancer in mouse and identify MKK7 as a vital molecular sensor to set a cellular anti-cancer barrier.
ISSN:1061-4036
1546-1718
DOI:10.1038/ng.767