4.6 Article

The ion channel TRPM7 regulates zinc-depletion-induced MDMX degradation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 5, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101292

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Funding

  1. NIH [CA213426, DK125404]

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Zinc deficiency can lead to MDMX protein degradation, while restoration of zinc levels can recover MDMX levels. A new protein called TRPM7, which interacts with MDMX, was identified to regulate MDMX levels by modulating intracellular zinc ion concentration. Inhibition of TRPM7 and overexpression of MDMX can both decrease the proliferation and migration of breast cancer cells like MCF-7.
Zinc deficiency has been linked to human diseases, including cancer. MDMX, a crucial zinc-containing negative regulator of p53, has been found to be amplified or overexpressed in various cancers and implicated in the cancer initiation and progression. We report here that zinc depletion by the ion chelator TPEN or Chelex resin results in MDMX protein degradation in a ubiquitination-independent and 20S proteasome-dependent manner. Restoration of zinc led to recovery of cellular levels of MDMX. Further, TPEN treatment inhibits growth of the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line, which is partially rescued by over expression of MDMX. Moreover, in a mass-spectrometry-based proteomics analysis, we identified TRPM7, a zinc-permeable ion channel, as a novel MDMX-interacting protein. TRPM7 stabilizes and induces the appearance of faster migrating species of MDMX on SDS-PAGE. Depletion of TRPM7 attenuates, while TRPM7 overexpression facilitates, the recovery of MDMX levels upon adding back zinc to TPEN-treated cells. Importantly, we found that TRPM7 inhibition, like TPEN treatment, decreases breast cancer cell MCF-7 proliferation and migration. The inhibitory effect on cell migration upon TRPM7 inhibition is also partially rescued by overexpression of MDMX. Together, our data indicate that TRPM7 regulates cellular levels of MDMX in part by modulating the intracellular Zn2+ concentration to promote tumorigenesis.

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