8 research outputs found

    Rae1 is an essential mitotic checkpoint regulator that cooperates with Bub3 to prevent chromosome missegregation

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    The WD-repeat proteins Rae1 and Bub3 show extensive sequence homology, indicative of functional similarity. However, previous studies have suggested that Rae1 is involved in the mRNA export pathway and Bub3 in the mitotic checkpoint. To determine the in vivo roles of Rae1 and Bub3 in mammals, we generated knockout mice that have these genes deleted individually or in combination. Here we show that haplo-insufficiency of either Rae1 or Bub3 results in a similar phenotype involving mitotic checkpoint defects and chromosome missegregation. We also show that overexpression of Rae1 can correct for Rae1 haplo-insufficiency and, surprisingly, Bub3 haplo-insufficiency. Rae1-null and Bub3-null mice are embryonic lethal, although cells from these mice did not have a detectable defect in nuclear export of mRNA. Unlike null mice, compound haplo-insufficient Rae1/Bub3 mice are viable. However, cells from these mice exhibit much greater rates of premature sister chromatid separation and chromosome missegregation than single haplo-insufficient cells. Finally, we show that mice with mitotic checkpoint defects are more susceptible to dimethylbenzanthrene-induced tumorigenesis than wild-type mice. Thus, our data demonstrate a novel function for Rae1 and characterize Rae1 and Bub3 as related proteins with essential, overlapping, and cooperating roles in the mitotic checkpoint

    Loss of CBP causes T cell lymphomagenesis in synergy with p27Kip1 insufficiency

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    AbstractCBP can function as a tumor suppressor, but the mechanisms that govern oncogenesis in its absence are unknown. Here we show that CBP inactivation in mouse thymocytes leads to lymphoma. Although CBP has been implicated in the transactivation functions of p53, development of these tumors does not seem to involve loss of p53 activity. CBP-null tumors show reduced levels of p27Kip1 and increased levels of cyclin E and Skp2, two oncoproteins that can promote p27Kip1 proteolysis. Reduction of p27Kip1 by introduction of a p27Kip1-null allele into CBP knockout mice accelerates lymphomagenesis and seems to obviate the requirement for Skp2 and cyclin E upregulation. These data suggest that CBP loss mediates lymphomagenesis in cooperation with a mechanism that reduces p27Kip1 abundance

    Nitric Oxide Regulates Tumor Cell Cross-Talk with Stromal Cells in the Tumor Microenvironment of the Liver

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    Tumor progression is regulated through paracrine interactions between tumor cells and stromal cells in the microenvironment, including endothelial cells and myofibroblasts. Nitric oxide (NO) is a key molecule in the regulation of tumor-microenvironment interactions, although its precise role is incompletely defined. By using complementary in vitro and in vivo approaches, we studied the effect of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS)-derived NO on liver tumor growth and metastasis in relation to adjacent stromal myofibroblasts and matrix because liver tumors maintain a rich, vascular stromal network enriched with phenotypically heterogeneous myofibroblasts. Mice with an eNOS deficiency developed liver tumors more frequently in response to carcinogens compared with control animals. In a surgical model of pancreatic cancer liver metastasis, eNOS overexpression in the tumor microenvironment attenuated both the number and size of tumor implants. NO promoted anoikis of tumor cells in vitro and limited their invasive capacity. Because tumor cell anoikis and invasion are both regulated by myofibroblast-derived matrix, we explored the effect of NO on tumor cell protease expression. Both microarray and Western blot analysis revealed eNOS-dependent down-regulation of the matrix protease cathepsin B within tumor cells, and silencing of cathepsin B attenuated tumor cell invasive capacity in a similar manner to that observed with eNOS overexpression. Thus, a NO gradient within the tumor microenvironment influences tumor progression through orchestrated molecular interactions between tumor cells and stroma

    Focal Adhesion Assembly in Myofibroblasts Fosters a Microenvironment that Promotes Tumor Growth

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    Cells within the tumor microenvironment influence tumor growth through multiple mechanisms. Pericytes such as hepatic stellate cells are an important cell within the tumor microenvironment; their transformation into highly motile myofibroblasts leads to angiogenesis, stromal cell recruitment, matrix deposition, and ensuing tumor growth. Thus, a better understanding of mechanisms that regulate motility of pericytes is required. Focal adhesions (FAs) form a physical link between the extracellular environment and the actin cytoskeleton, a requisite step for cell motility. FAs contain a collection of proteins including the Ena/VASP family member, vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP); however, a role for VASP in FA development has been elusive. Using a comprehensive siRNA knockdown approach and a variety of VASP mutants coupled with complementary cell imaging methodologies, we demonstrate a requirement of VASP for optimal development of FAs and cell spreading in LX2 liver myofibroblasts, which express high levels of endogenous VASP. Rac1, a binding partner of VASP, acts in tandem with VASP to regulate FAs. In vivo, perturbation of Ena/VASP function in tumor myofibroblast precursor cells significantly reduces pericyte recruitment to tumor vasculature, myofibroblastic transformation, tumor angiogenesis, and tumor growth, providing in vivo pathobiologic relevance to these findings. Taken together, our results identify Ena/VASP as a significant modifier of tumor growth through regulation of FA dynamics and ensuing pericyte/myofibroblast function within the tumor microenvironment
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