4.6 Article

Protein kinase C fusion proteins are paradoxically loss of function in cancer

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JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
卷 296, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100445

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资金

  1. NIH [GM43154, R35 GM122523]
  2. University of California, San Diego Graduate Training Program in Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology [T32 GM007752]
  3. Gates Millennium Scholars Program
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE1144086]
  5. PhRMA Foundation PreDoctoral Fellowship in Pharmacology Toxicology [20183844]
  6. Ninewells Cancer Campaign Cancer Research award

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Gene fusions involving protein kinase C (PKC) are unique and distinct from oncogenic fusions, presenting a mechanism for loss of PKC function in cancer. PKC catalytic domain fusions are functionally lost due to instability, while PKC regulatory domain fusions compete for diacylglycerol to suppress endogenous PKC activity.
Within the AGC kinase superfamily, gene fusions resulting from chromosomal rearrangements have been most frequently described for protein kinase C (PKC), with gene fragments encoding either the C-terminal catalytic domain or the N-terminal regulatory moiety fused to other genes. Kinase fusions that eliminate regulatory domains are typically gain of function and often oncogenic. However, several quality control pathways prevent accumulation of aberrant PKC, suggesting that PKC fusions may paradoxically be loss of function. To explore this topic, we used biochemical, cellular, and genome editing approaches to investigate the function of fusions that retain the portion of the gene encoding either the catalytic domain or regulatory domain of PKC. Overexpression studies revealed that PKC catalytic domain fusions were constitutively active but vulnerable to degradation. Genome editing of endogenous genes to generate a cancer-associated PKC fusion resulted in cells with detectable levels of fusion transcript but no detectable protein. Hence, PKC catalytic domain fusions are paradoxically loss of function as a result of their instability, preventing appreciable accumulation of protein in cells. Overexpression of a PKC regulatory domain fusion suppressed both basal and agonist-induced endogenous PKC activity, acting in a dominant-negative manner by competing for diacylglycerol. For both catalytic and regulatory domain fusions, the PKC component of the fusion proteins mediated the effects of the full-length fusions on the parameters examined, suggesting that the partner protein is dispensable in these contexts. Taken together, our findings reveal that PKC gene fusions are distinct from oncogenic fusions and present a mechanism by which loss of PKC function occurs in cancer.

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