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BLM Potentiates c-Jun Degradation and Alters Its Function as an Oncogenic Transcription Factor
Author(s) -
Raina Priyadarshini,
Mansoor Hussain,
Preeti Attri,
Ekjot Kaur,
Vivek Tripathi,
Swati Priya,
Parashar Dhapola,
Dhurjhoti Saha,
Vinoth Madhavan,
Shantanu Chowdhury,
Sagar Sengupta
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.101
Subject(s) - ubiquitin ligase , transcription factor , c jun , ubiquitin , bloom syndrome , helicase , mutant , signal transducing adaptor protein , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , promoter , transcription (linguistics) , cancer research , chemistry , gene , genetics , signal transduction , gene expression , rna , linguistics , philosophy
Mutations in BLM helicase predispose Bloom syndrome (BS) patients to a wide spectrum of cancers. We demonstrate that MIB1-ubiquitylated BLM in G1 phase functions as an adaptor protein by enhancing the binding of transcription factor c-Jun and its E3 ligase, Fbw7α. BLM enhances the K48/K63-linked ubiquitylation on c-Jun, thereby enhancing the rate of its subsequent degradation. Functionally defective Fbw7α mutants prevalent in multiple human cancers are reactivated by BLM. However, BS patient-derived BLM mutants cannot potentiate Fbw7α-dependent c-Jun degradation. The decrease in the levels of c-Jun in cells expressing BLM prevents effective c-Jun binding to 2,584 gene promoters. This causes decreases in the transcript and protein levels of c-Jun targets in BLM-expressing cells, resulting in attenuated c-Jun-dependent effects during neoplastic transformation. Thus, BLM carries out its function as a tumor suppressor by enhancing c-Jun turnover and thereby preventing its activity as a proto-oncogene.

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