Publication | Open Access
A SUMOylation-Dependent Transcriptional Subprogram Is Required for Myc-Driven Tumorigenesis
434
Citations
32
References
2011
Year
Transcriptional RegulationSystems BiologyCell RegulationOncogenic AgentMedicineTranscription RegulationSumoylation-dependent Transcriptional SubprogramCancer Cell BiologyMyc HyperactivationMyc Oncogenic ProgramBreast CancerMyc-synthetic Lethal GenesCancer GeneticsGene ExpressionCancer BiologyCell BiologyTumor Biology
Myc is an oncogenic transcription factor frequently dysregulated in human cancer. To identify pathways supporting the Myc oncogenic program, we used a genome-wide RNA interference screen to search for Myc-synthetic lethal genes and uncovered a role for the SUMO-activating enzyme (SAE1/2). Loss of SAE1/2 enzymatic activity drives synthetic lethality with Myc. Inactivation of SAE2 leads to mitotic catastrophe and cell death upon Myc hyperactivation. Mechanistically, SAE2 inhibition switches a transcriptional subprogram of Myc from activated to repressed. A subset of these SUMOylation-dependent Myc switchers (SMS genes) is required for mitotic spindle function and to support the Myc oncogenic program. SAE2 is required for growth of Myc-dependent tumors in mice, and gene expression analyses of Myc-high human breast cancers suggest that low SAE1 and SAE2 abundance in the tumors correlates with longer metastasis-free survival of the patients. Thus, inhibition of SUMOylation may merit investigation as a possible therapy for Myc-driven human cancers.
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