4.8 Review

The CMG helicase and cancer: a tumor engine and weakness with missing mutations

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 42, Issue 7, Pages 473-490

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-022-02572-8

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The CMG helicase is an important protein complex involved in DNA replication in mammalian cells. It plays a role in DNA melting and unwinding and is regulated by growth factors and signaling factors. Dysregulation of CMG can lead to genomic instability and contribute to tumorigenesis. This review aims to explore the regulation of CMG during its assembly and activation and highlights its potential as a therapeutic target in cancer.
The replicative Cdc45-MCM-GINS (CMG) helicase is a large protein complex that functions in the DNA melting and unwinding steps as a component of replisomes during DNA replication in mammalian cells. Although the CMG performs this important role in cell growth, the CMG is not a simple bystander in cell cycle events. Components of the CMG, specifically the MCM precursors, are also involved in maintaining genomic stability by regulating DNA replication fork speeds, facilitating recovery from replicative stresses, and preventing consequential DNA damage. Given these important functions, MCM/CMG complexes are highly regulated by growth factors such as TGF-ss1 and by signaling factors such as Myc, Cyclin E, and the retinoblastoma protein. Mismanagement of MCM/CMG complexes when these signaling mediators are deregulated, and in the absence of the tumor suppressor protein p53, leads to increased genomic instability and is a contributor to tumorigenic transformation and tumor heterogeneity. The goal of this review is to provide insight into the mechanisms and dynamics by which the CMG is regulated during its assembly and activation in mammalian genomes, and how errors in CMG regulation due to oncogenic changes promote tumorigenesis. Finally, and most importantly, we highlight the emerging understanding of the CMG helicase as an exploitable vulnerability and novel target for therapeutic intervention in cancer.

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