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Two diphosphorylated degrons control c-Myc degradation by the Fbw7 tumor suppressor.

Markus WelckerBaiyun WangDomniţa-Valeria RusnacYasser HussainiJherek SwangerNing ZhengBruce E Clurman
Published in: Science advances (2022)
c-Myc (hereafter, Myc) is a cancer driver whose abundance is regulated by the SCF Fbw7 ubiquitin ligase and proteasomal degradation. Fbw7 binds to a phosphorylated Myc degron centered at threonine 58 (T58), and mutations of Fbw7 or T58 impair Myc degradation in cancers. Here, we identify a second Fbw7 phosphodegron at Myc T244 that is required for Myc ubiquitylation and acts in concert with T58 to engage Fbw7. While Ras-dependent Myc serine 62 phosphorylation (pS62) is thought to stabilize Myc by preventing Fbw7 binding, we find instead that pS62 greatly enhances Fbw7 binding and is an integral part of a high-affinity degron. Crystallographic studies revealed that both degrons bind Fbw7 in their diphosphorylated forms and that the T244 degron is recognized via a unique mode involving Fbw7 arginine 689 (R689), a mutational hotspot in cancers. These insights have important implications for Myc-associated tumorigenesis and therapeutic strategies targeting Myc stability.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • nitric oxide
  • protein kinase
  • dna binding
  • cancer therapy
  • lymph node metastasis