4.8 Article

Enhanced autophagy and NFE2L2/NRF2 pathway activation in SPOP mutation-driven prostate cancer

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 2013-2015

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2022.2062873

Keywords

Gene mutation; KEAP1; oxidative stress; phase separation; prostate cancer; SPOP; SQSTM1; ubiquitination

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91954106, 81872109, 91957125, 81972396]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [22ZR1449200, 22ZR1406600]
  3. Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, Fudan University [SKLGE-2111]
  4. Science and Technology Research Program of Shanghai [9DZ2282100]

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This study reveals a negative regulatory role of SPOP in autophagy and NFE2L2 pathway activation. The study found that SPOP induces non-degradative ubiquitination of SQSTM1, thereby suppressing autophagy and NFE2L2 pathway activation. The PCa-associated SPOP mutants lose the capacity to ubiquitinate SQSTM1 and instead enhance autophagy and the antioxidant response in a dominant-negative manner.
SQSTM1/p62 is a selective macroautophagy/autophagy receptor that drives ubiquitinated cargos toward the lysosome for degradation, and also a stress-induced scaffold protein that helps cells to cope with oxidative stress through sequestrating KEAP1 and subsequent activation of the NFE2L2/NRF2 antioxidant pathway. Accumulating evidence implicates SQSTM1 dysregulation in the induction of multiple oncogenic transformations in vivo. SPOP (speckle type BTB/POZ protein), an E3 ubiquitin ligase adaptor, is the most frequently mutated gene in prostate cancer (Pca), but the molecular mechanisms underlying how SPOP mutations contribute to PCa tumorigenesis are still largely unknown. In a recent study, we describe a new role for SPOP as a negative regulator of autophagy and NFE2L2 pathway activation. SPOP binds and induces the non-degradative ubiquitination of SQSTM1 at Lys420. This post-translational modification decreases SQSTM1 body formation, liquid phase condensation, dimerization, and ubiquitin-binding capacity, thereby suppressing SQSTM1-dependent autophagy, KEAP1 sequestration, and NFE2L2 activation. Notably, PCa-associated SPOP mutants lose the capacity to ubiquitinate SQSTM1 and instead enhance autophagy and the antioxidant response in a dominant-negative manner. Thus, our findings indicate the critical roles of autophagy and NFE2L2 pathway activation in PCa tumorigenesis by oncogenic SPOP mutations.

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