SKP2 oncogene is a direct MYC target gene and MYC down-regulates p27 KIP1 through SKP2 in human leukemia cells
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Bretones Sánchez, Gabriel; Acosta Cobacho, Juan Carlos; Caraballo Otero, Juan Manuel; Ferrándiz Díaz, Nuria; M. Teresa Gómez-Casares; Albajar Molera, Marta; Blanco Fernández, Rosa

Fecha
2011-03Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2011, 286(11), 9815-9825
Editorial
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc.
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Palabras clave
Carcinogenesis
Cell cycle
Leukemia
MYC
Ubiquitin ligase
SKP2
p27
Resumen/Abstract
SKP2 is the ubiquitin ligase subunit that targets p27KIP1 (p27) for degradation. SKP2 is induced in the G1-S transit of the cell cycle, is frequently overexpressed in human cancer, and displays transformation activity in experimental models. Here we show that MYC induces SKP2 expression at the mRNA and protein levels in human myeloid leukemia K562 cells with conditional MYC expression. Importantly, in these systems, induction of MYC did not activate cell proliferation, ruling out SKP2 up-regulation as a consequence of cell cycle entry. MYC-dependent SKP2 expression was also detected in other cell types such as lymphoid, fibroblastic, and epithelial cell lines. MYC induced SKP2 mRNA expression in the absence of protein synthesis and activated the SKP2 promoter in luciferase reporter assays. With chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, MYC was detected bound to a region of human SKP2 gene promoter that includes E-boxes. The K562 cell line derives from human chronic myeloid leukemia. In a cohort of chronic myeloid leukemia bone marrow samples, we found a correlation between MYC and SKP2 mRNA levels. Analysis of cancer expression databases also indicated a correlation between MYC and SKP2 expression in lymphoma. Finally, MYC-induced SKP2 expression resulted in a decrease in p27 protein in K562 cells. Moreover, silencing of SKP2 abrogated the MYC-mediated down-regulation of p27. Our data show that SKP2 is a direct MYC target gene and that MYC-mediated SKP2 induction leads to reduced p27 levels. The results suggest the induction of SKP2 oncogene as a new mechanism for MYC-dependent transformation.
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