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Nuclear Pores Promote Lethal Prostate Cancer by Increasing POM121-Driven E2F1, MYC, and AR Nuclear Import
Author(s) -
Verónica Rodríguez-Bravo,
Raffaella Pippa,
Won-Min Song,
Marc Cárceles-Cordon,
Ana Dominguez-Andres,
Naoto Fujiwara,
JungReem Woo,
Anna P. Koh,
Adam Ertel,
Ravi K. Lokareddy,
Álvaro CuestaDomínguez,
Rosa S. Kim,
Irene Rodrı́guez,
Peiyao Li,
Ronald Gordon,
Hadassa Hirschfield,
Josep María Prats,
E. Premkumar Reddy,
Alessandro Fatatis,
Daniel P. Petrylak,
Leonard G. Gomella,
William K. Kelly,
Scott W. Lowe,
Karen E. Knudsen,
Matthew D. Galsky,
Gino Cingolani,
Amaia Lujambio,
Yujin Hoshida,
Josep Domingo-Domènech
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2018.07.015
Subject(s) - biology , nucleoporin , cancer research , nuclear pore , transcription factor , nuclear export signal , nuclear transport , transcriptome , microbiology and biotechnology , cell nucleus , genetics , gene , cytoplasm , gene expression
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) regulate nuclear-cytoplasmic transport, transcription, and genome integrity in eukaryotic cells. However, their functional roles in cancer remain poorly understood. We interrogated the evolutionary transcriptomic landscape of NPC components, nucleoporins (Nups), from primary to advanced metastatic human prostate cancer (PC). Focused loss-of-function genetic screen of top-upregulated Nups in aggressive PC models identified POM121 as a key contributor to PC aggressiveness. Mechanistically, POM121 promoted PC progression by enhancing importin-dependent nuclear transport of key oncogenic (E2F1, MYC) and PC-specific (AR-GATA2) transcription factors, uncovering a pharmacologically targetable axis that, when inhibited, decreased tumor growth, restored standard therapy efficacy, and improved survival in patient-derived pre-clinical models. Our studies molecularly establish a role of NPCs in PC progression and give a rationale for NPC-regulated nuclear import targeting as a therapeutic strategy for lethal PC. These findings may have implications for understanding how NPC deregulation contributes to the pathogenesis of other tumor types.

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