4.8 Article

Male germ cell-associated kinase is overexpressed in prostate cancer cells and causes mitotic defects via deregulation of APC/CCDH1

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 31, Issue 24, Pages 2907-2918

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2011.464

Keywords

APC/C complex; CDH1/FZR1; MAK; mitosis; prostate cancer

Funding

  1. CDMRP [893261, CA150197] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  2. NCI NIH HHS [CA150197, R01 CA150197] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK078243, DK078243, R01 DK052659, DK526529] Funding Source: Medline

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Male germ cell-associated kinase (MAK), a direct transcriptional target of androgen receptor (AR), is a co-activator of AR. In this study, we determined the activating mechanism of MAK and identified a previously unknown AR-independent role of MAK in mitosis. We found that MAK kinase activity requires dual phosphorylation of the conserved TDY motif and that the phosphorylation is dynamic during cell cycle. MAK associates with CDH1 (FZR1, fizzy/cell division cycle 20 related 1) and phosphorylates CDH1 at sites phosphorylated by cyclin-dependent kinases. When MAK is overexpressed, the binding of CDH1 to anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome decreased, resulting in an attenuation of anaphase-promoting complex/C ubiquitin ligase activity and the consequential stabilization of the CDH1 targets such as Aurora kinase A and Polo-like kinase 1. As such, overexpression of MAK leads to mitotic defects such as centrosome amplification and lagging chromosomes. Our immunohistochemistry result showed that MAK is overexpressed in prostate tumor tissues, suggesting a role of MAK in prostate carcinogenesis. Taken with our previous results, our data implicate MAK in both AR activation and chromosomal instability, acting in both early and late prostate cancer development.

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