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Reciprocal antagonism of PIN1-APC/CCDH1 governs mitotic protein stability and cell cycle entry.

Nature communications (2024-04-16)
Shizhong Ke, Fabin Dang, Lin Wang, Jia-Yun Chen, Mandar T Naik, Wenxue Li, Abhishek Thavamani, Nami Kim, Nandita M Naik, Huaxiu Sui, Wei Tang, Chenxi Qiu, Kazuhiro Koikawa, Felipe Batalini, Emily Stern Gatof, Daniela Arango Isaza, Jaymin M Patel, Xiaodong Wang, John G Clohessy, Yujing J Heng, Galit Lahav, Yansheng Liu, Nathanael S Gray, Xiao Zhen Zhou, Wenyi Wei, Gerburg M Wulf, Kun Ping Lu
RESUMEN

Induced oncoproteins degradation provides an attractive anti-cancer modality. Activation of anaphase-promoting complex (APC/CCDH1) prevents cell-cycle entry by targeting crucial mitotic proteins for degradation. Phosphorylation of its co-activator CDH1 modulates the E3 ligase activity, but little is known about its regulation after phosphorylation and how to effectively harness APC/CCDH1 activity to treat cancer. Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase NIMA-interacting 1 (PIN1)-catalyzed phosphorylation-dependent cis-trans prolyl isomerization drives tumor malignancy. However, the mechanisms controlling its protein turnover remain elusive. Through proteomic screens and structural characterizations, we identify a reciprocal antagonism of PIN1-APC/CCDH1 mediated by domain-oriented phosphorylation-dependent dual interactions as a fundamental mechanism governing mitotic protein stability and cell-cycle entry. Remarkably, combined PIN1 and cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) inhibition creates a positive feedback loop of PIN1 inhibition and APC/CCDH1 activation to irreversibly degrade PIN1 and other crucial mitotic proteins, which force permanent cell-cycle exit and trigger anti-tumor immunity, translating into synergistic efficacy against triple-negative breast cancer.

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Millipore
Anti-HA−agarosa monoclonal antibody produced in mouse, clone HA-7, purified immunoglobulin, PBS suspension