A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

UBR5 Is Coamplified with MYC in Breast Tumors and Encodes an Ubiquitin Ligase That Limits MYC-Dependent Apoptosis




AuthorsQiao X, Liu Y, Prada ML, Mohan AK, Gupta A, Jaiswal A, Sharma M, Merisaari J, Haikala HM, Talvinen K, Yetukuri L, Pylvänäinen JW, Klefstrom J, Kronqvist P, Meinander A, Aittokallio T, Hietakangas V, Eilers M, Westermarck J, Westermarck J

PublisherAMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH

Publication year2020

JournalCancer Research

Journal name in sourceCANCER RESEARCH

Journal acronymCANCER RES

Volume80

Issue7

First page 1414

Last page1427

Number of pages14

ISSN0008-5472

eISSN1538-7445

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-19-1647

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/47005529


Abstract
For maximal oncogenic activity, cellular MYC protein levels need to be tightly controlled so that they do not induce apoptosis. Here, we show how ubiquitin ligase UBR5 functions as a molecular rheostat to prevent excess accumulation of MYC protein. UBR5 ubiquitinates MYC and its effects on MYC protein stability are independent of FBXW7. Silencing of endogenous UBR5 induced MYC protein expression and regulated MYC target genes. Consistent with the tumor suppressor function of UBR5 (HYD) in Drosophila, HYD suppressed dMYC-dependent overgrowth of wing imaginal discs. In contrast, in cancer cells, UBR5 suppressed MYC-dependent priming to therapy-induced apoptosis. Of direct cancer relevance, MYC and UBR5 genes were coamplified in MYC-driven human cancers. Functionally, UBR5 suppressed MYC-mediated apoptosis in p53-mutant breast cancer cells with UBR5/MYC coamplification. Furthermore, single-cell immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated reciprocal expression of UBR5 and MYC in human basal-type breast cancer tissues. In summary, UBR5 is a novel MYC ubiquitin ligase and an endogenous rheostat for MYC activity. In MYC-amplified, and p53-mutant breast cancer cells, UBR5 has an important role in suppressing MYC-mediated apoptosis priming and in protection from drug-induced apoptosis.Significance: These findings identify UBR5 as a novel MYC regulator, the inactivation of which could be very important for understanding of MYC dysregulation on cancer cells.

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