HDAC2 Regulates Site-Specific Acetylation of MDM2 and Its Ubiquitination Signaling in Tumor Suppression.

Nikita Patel, Juehong Wang,Kumiko Shiozawa,Kevin B Jones, Yanfeng Zhang, Jeremy W Prokop, George G Davenport,Naoe T Nihira, Zhenyue Hao,Derek Wong,Laurel Brandsmeier, Sarah K Meadows,Arthur V Sampaio,Ryan Vander Werff, Makoto Endo,Mario R Capecchi, Kelly M McNagny, Tak W Mak,Torsten O Nielsen, T Michael Underhill, Richard M Myers, Tadashi Kondo,Le Su

iScience(2019)

引用 13|浏览59
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摘要
Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are promising targets for cancer therapy, although their individual actions remain incompletely understood. Here, we identify a role for HDAC2 in the regulation of MDM2 acetylation at previously uncharacterized lysines. Upon inactivation of HDAC2, this acetylation creates a structural signal in the lysine-rich domain of MDM2 to prevent the recognition and degradation of its downstream substrate, MCL-1 ubiquitin ligase E3 (MULE). This mechanism further reveals a therapeutic connection between the MULE ubiquitin ligase function and tumor suppression. Specifically, we show that HDAC inhibitor treatment promotes the accumulation of MULE, which diminishes the t(X; 18) translocation-associated synovial sarcomagenesis by directly targeting the fusion product SS18-SSX for degradation. These results uncover a new HDAC2-dependent pathway that integrates reversible acetylation signaling to the anticancer ubiquitin response.
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