4.6 Article

Dyrk2-associated EDD-DDB1-VprBP E3 Ligase Inhibits Telomerase by TERT Degradation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 288, Issue 10, Pages 7252-7262

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M112.416792

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University Cancer Foundation [IRG-08-061-01]
  2. Center for Stem Cell and Developmental Biology Transformative Pilot Grant
  3. Institutional Research Grant
  4. New Faculty Award (M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant)
  5. Metastasis Research Center Grant
  6. National Institutes of Health through M.D. Anderson's Cancer Center Support Grant [CA016672]

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Telomerase maintains the telomere, a specialized chromosomal end structure that is essential for genomic stability and cell immortalization. Telomerase is not active in most somatic cells, but its reactivation is one of the hallmarks of cancer. In this study, we found that dual-specificity tyrosine-(Y)-phosphorylation-regulated kinase 2 (Dyrk2) negatively regulates telomerase activity. Dyrk2 phosphorylates TERT protein, a catalytic subunit of telomerase. Phosphorylated TERT is then associated with the EDD-DDB1-VprBP E3 ligase complex for subsequent ubiquitin-mediated TERT protein degradation. During the cell cycle, Dyrk2 interacts with TERT at the G2/M phase and induces degradation. In contrast, depletion of endogenous Dyrk2 disrupts the cell cycle-dependent regulation of TERT and elicits the constitutive activation of telomerase. Similarly, a Dyrk2 nonsense mutation identified in breast cancer compromises ubiquitination-mediated TERT protein degradation. Our findings suggest the novel molecular mechanism of kinase-associated telomerase regulation.

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