Cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding protein is a conserved target of tumor suppressor HRPT2/CDC73
Parafibromin, a tumor suppressor protein encoded by HRPT2/CDC73 and implicated in parathyroid cancer and the hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor (HPT-JT) familial cancer syndrome, is part of the PAF1 transcriptional regulatory complex. Parafibromin has been implicated in apoptosis and growth arrest, but t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cell death and differentiation 2010-10, Vol.17 (10), p.1551-1565 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Parafibromin, a tumor suppressor protein encoded by
HRPT2/CDC73
and implicated in parathyroid cancer and the hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor (HPT-JT) familial cancer syndrome, is part of the PAF1 transcriptional regulatory complex. Parafibromin has been implicated in apoptosis and growth arrest, but the mechanism by which its loss of function promotes neoplasia is poorly understood. In this study we report that a hypomorphic allele of
hyrax (hyx)
, the
Drosophila
homolog of
HRPT2/CDC73,
rescues the loss-of-ventral-eye phenotype of
lobe (Akt1s1)
. Such rescue is consistent with previous reports that hyx/parafibromin is required for the nuclear transduction of Wingless (Wg)/Wnt signals and that Wg signaling antagonizes
lobe
function. A screen using double
hyx/lobe
heterozygotes identified an additional interaction with
orb
and
orb2
, the homologs of mammalian cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding protein (CPEB), a translational regulatory protein.
Hyx
and
orb2
heterozygotes lived longer and were more resistant to starvation than controls. In mammalian cells, knockdown of parafibromin expression reduced levels of
CPEB1
. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) showed occupancy of
CPEB1
by endogenous parafibromin. Bioinformatic analysis revealed a significant overlap between human transcripts potentially regulated by parafibromin and CPEB. These results show that parafibromin may exert both transcriptional and, through CPEB, translational control over a subset of target genes and that loss of parafibromin (and CPEB) function may promote tumorigenesis in part by conferring resistance to nutritional stress. |
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ISSN: | 1350-9047 1476-5403 1476-5403 |
DOI: | 10.1038/cdd.2010.32 |