4.5 Review

PHLPPing the balance: restoration of protein kinase C in cancer

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 478, Issue 2, Pages 341-355

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20190765

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R35 GM122523]

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Protein kinase signalling is often disrupted in human diseases, particularly in cancer. While 77 kinase inhibitors are currently approved for treatment by the FDA, targeting PKC as an oncogene in cancer has not been successful. Recent studies suggest that restoring PKC function may be a more effective approach, as high PKC expression is protective in many cancers.
Protein kinase signalling, which transduces external messages to mediate cellular growth and metabolism, is frequently deregulated in human disease, and specifically in cancer. As such, there are 77 kinase inhibitors currently approved for the treatment of human disease by the FDA. Due to their historical association as the receptors for the tumour-promoting phorbol esters, PKC isozymes were initially targeted as oncogenes in cancer. However, a meta-analysis of clinical trials with PKC inhibitors in combination with chemotherapy revealed that these treatments were not advantageous, and instead resulted in poorer outcomes and greater adverse effects. More recent studies suggest that instead of inhibiting PKC, therapies should aim to restore PKC function in cancer. cancer-associated PKC mutations are generally loss-of-function and high PKC protein is protective in many cancers, including most notably KRAS-driven cancers. These recent findings have reframed PKC as having a tumour suppressive function. This review focusses on a potential new mechanism of restoring PKC function in cancer - through targeting of its negative regulator, the Ser/Thr protein phosphatase PHLPP. This phosphatase regulates PKC steady-state levels by regulating the phosphorylation of a key site, the hydrophobic motif, whose phosphorylation is necessary for the stability of the enzyme. We also consider whether the phosphorylation of the potent oncogene KRAS provides a mechanism by which high PKC expression may be protective in KRAS-driven human cancers.

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