4.6 Article

Perturbation of BRMS1 interactome reveals pathways that impact metastasis

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 16, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259128

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资金

  1. Stowers Institute for Medical Research
  2. METAvivor Research and Support Inc.
  3. National Institute for General Medical Sciences [GM112639, F32GM122215]
  4. National Foundation for Cancer Research (DRW), USPHS National Cancer Institute [CA134981, CA168524]
  5. American Cancer Society [PF-16-227-O1-CSM]
  6. Susan G. Komen for the Cure [SAC110037]
  7. National Institute of General Medical Science [P20-GM103418]
  8. KU Cancer Center Biostatistics and Informatics Shared Resource - National Cancer Institute Cancer Center [P30-CA168524]
  9. Kansas Institute for Precision Medicine COBRE - National Institute of General Medical Science [P20-GM130423]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The C-terminus of BRMS1 plays a critical role in metastasis suppression, with its phosphorylation status affecting protein interactions related to various biological processes and metastasis. These findings significantly contribute to understanding how BRMS1 regulates metastasis through interactions with Sin3/HDAC complexes and expand insights into the molecular role of BRMS1.
Breast Cancer Metastasis Suppressor 1 (BRMS1) expression is associated with longer patient survival in multiple cancer types. Understanding BRMS1 functionality will provide insights into both mechanism of action and will enhance potential therapeutic development. In this study, we confirmed that the C-terminus of BRMS1 is critical for metastasis suppression and hypothesized that critical protein interactions in this region would explain its function. Phosphorylation status at S237 regulates BRMS1 protein interactions related to a variety of biological processes, phenotypes [cell cycle (e.g., CDKN2A), DNA repair (e.g., BRCA1)], and metastasis [(e.g., TCF2 and POLE2)]. Presence of S237 also directly decreased MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma migration in vitro and metastases in vivo. The results add significantly to our understanding of how BRMS1 interactions with Sin3/HDAC complexes regulate metastasis and expand insights into BRMS1's molecular role, as they demonstrate BRMS1 C-terminus involvement in distinct protein-protein interactions.

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