An impaired ubiquitin-proteasome system increases APOBEC3A abundance.
Margo CoxonMadeline A DennisAlexandra DananbergChristopher D CollinsHannah E WilsonJordyn MeekmaMarina I SavenkovaDaniel NgChelsea A OsbronTony M MertzAlan G GoodmanSascha H C DuttkeJohn MaciejowskiSteven A RobertsPublished in: NAR cancer (2023)
Apolipoprotein B messenger RNA (mRNA) editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like (APOBEC) cytidine deaminases cause genetic instability during cancer development. Elevated APOBEC3A (A3A) levels result in APOBEC signature mutations; however, mechanisms regulating A3A abundance in breast cancer are unknown. Here, we show that dysregulating the ubiquitin-proteasome system with proteasome inhibitors, including Food and Drug Administration-approved anticancer drugs, increased A3A abundance in breast cancer and multiple myeloma cell lines. Unexpectedly, elevated A3A occurs via an ∼100-fold increase in A3A mRNA levels, indicating that proteasome inhibition triggers a transcriptional response as opposed to or in addition to blocking A3A degradation. This transcriptional regulation is mediated in part through FBXO22, a protein that functions in SKP1-cullin-F-box ubiquitin ligase complexes and becomes dysregulated during carcinogenesis. Proteasome inhibitors increased cellular cytidine deaminase activity, decreased cellular proliferation and increased genomic DNA damage in an A3A-dependent manner. Our findings suggest that proteasome dysfunction, either acquired during cancer development or induced therapeutically, could increase A3A-induced genetic heterogeneity and thereby influence therapeutic responses in patients.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- drug administration
- papillary thyroid
- multiple myeloma
- binding protein
- diabetic rats
- copy number
- high glucose
- antibiotic resistance genes
- crispr cas
- small molecule
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- squamous cell
- gene expression
- prognostic factors
- signaling pathway
- childhood cancer
- lymph node metastasis
- heat shock
- heat stress