4.6 Article

The Par-4/PTEN connection in tumor suppression

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 8, Issue 16, Pages 2518-2522

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/cc.8.16.9384

Keywords

Par-4; PTEN; aPKC; PKC zeta; Akt; NF kappa B; prostate cancer; tumor suppressors

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Funding

  1. University of Cincinnati-CSIC Collaborative Agreement
  2. NIH [1R01CA134530]
  3. Barrett/UC Cancer Center Pilot Grant

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Tumor suppressors function in a coordinated regulatory network, and their inactivation is a key step in carcinogenesis. The tumor suppressor Par-4 is a novel integral player in the PTEN network. Thus, Par-4 is absent in a high percentage of human prostate carcinomas, and its loss is concomitantly associated with PTEN loss. Genetic ablation of Par-4 induces fully invasive prostate carcinomas in PTEN-heterozygous mice. In contrast, Par-4 deficiency alone, like PTEN heterozygosis, results in lesions that are unable to progress beyond the benign neoplastic stage known as PIN. At this PIN transition, the mutual induction of Par-4 and PTEN is an additional regulatory step in preventing cancer progression. Par-4 deficiency cooperates with PTEN haploinsufficiency in prostate cancer initiation and progression and their simultaneous inactivation, in addition to enhancing Akt activation, sets in motion a unique mechanism involving the synergistic activation of NF kappa B. These results suggest that the concurrent interruption of complementary signaling pathways targeting PI3K/Akt and NF kappa B activation could provide new and effective strategies for cancer therapy.

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