4.7 Review

Aberrant SKP1 Expression: Diverse Mechanisms Impacting Genome and Chromosome Stability

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.859582

Keywords

cancer; centrosome dynamics; chromosome instability; DNA damage response; Fbox protein; genome instability; SCF complex; SKP1

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Alexander Graham Bell Canadian Graduate Scholarship
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Canada Graduate (MSc) Scholarship
  3. Research Manitoba/CancerCare Manitoba Studentship
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Canada Graduate Scholarship
  5. NSERC Discovery Grant [RGPIN: 2018-05007]
  6. CancerCare Manitoba Foundation Operating Grant

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SKP1 plays a central role in regulating essential cellular processes, and its aberrant expression and function may lead to genome instability and cancer pathogenesis.
The S-phase Kinase-Associated Protein 1 (SKP1) is a core component of the SKP1, Cullin 1, F-box protein (SCF) complex, an E3 ubiquitin ligase that serves to poly-ubiquitinate a vast array of protein targets as a signal for their proteasomal degradation, thereby playing a critical role in the regulation of downstream biological processes. Many of the proteins regulated by SKP1 and the SCF complex normally function within pathways that are essential for maintaining genome stability, including DNA damage repair, apoptotic signaling, and centrosome dynamics. Accordingly, aberrant SKP1 and SCF complex expression and function is expected to disrupt these essential pathways, which may have pathological implications in diseases like cancer. In this review, we summarize the central role SKP1 plays in regulating essential cellular processes; we describe functional models in which SKP1 expression is altered and the corresponding impacts on genome stability; and we discuss the prevalence of SKP1 somatic copy number alterations, mutations, and altered protein expression across different cancer types, to identify a potential link between SKP1 and SCF complex dysfunction to chromosome/genome instability and cancer pathogenesis. Ultimately, understanding the role of SKP1 in driving chromosome instability will expand upon our rudimentary understanding of the key events required for genome/chromosome stability that may aid in our understanding of cancer pathogenesis, which will be critical for future studies to establish whether SKP1 may be useful as prognostic indicator or as a therapeutic target.

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