Research Outputs

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
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    Publication
    NSD3S stabilizes MYC through hindering its interaction with FBXW7
    (Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2019) ;
    Kwan, Albert
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    Doyle, Sean
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    Ivanov, Andrey
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    Du, Yuhong
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    Fu, Haian
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    Xuebiao Yao
    The MYC transcription factor plays a key role in cell growth control. Enhanced MYC protein stability has been found to promote tumorigenesis. Thus, understanding how MYC stability is controlled may have significant implications for revealing MYC-driven growth regulatory mechanisms in physiological and pathological processes. Our previous work identified the histone lysine methyltransferase nuclear receptor binding SET domain protein 3 (NSD3) as a MYC modulator. NSD3S, a noncatalytic isoform of NSD3 with oncogenic activity, appears to bind, stabilize, and activate the transcriptional activity of MYC. However, the mechanism by which NSD3S stabilizes MYC remains to be elucidated. To uncover the nature of the interaction and the underlying mechanism of MYC regulation by NSD3S, we characterized the binding interface between both proteins by narrowing the interface to a 15-amino acid region in NSD3S that is partially required for MYC regulation. Mechanistically, NSD3S binds to MYC and reduces the association of F-box and WD repeat domain containing 7 (FBXW7) with MYC, which results in suppression of FBXW7-mediated proteasomal degradation of MYC and an increase in MYC protein half-life. These results support a critical role for NSD3S in the regulation of MYC function and provide a novel mechanism for NSD3S oncogenic function through inhibition of FBXW7-mediated degradation of MYC.
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    Publication
    The OncoPPi network of cancer-focused protein–protein interactions to inform biological insights and therapeutic strategies
    (Springer Nature, 2017)
    Li, Zenggang
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    Ivanov, Andrei A
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    Su, Rina
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    Qi, Qi
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    Liu, Songlin
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    Webber, Philip
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    McMillan, Elizabeth
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    Rusnak, Lauren
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    Pham, Cau
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    Chen, Xiaoqian
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    Mo, Xiulei
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    Revennaugh, Brian
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    Zhou, Wei
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    Marcus, Adam
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    Harati, Sahar
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    Chen, Xiang
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    Johns, Margaret A
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    White, Michael A
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    Moreno, Carlos S
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    D. Cooper, Lee A
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    Du, Yuhong
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    Khuri, Fadlo R
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    Fu, Haian
    As genomics advances reveal the cancer gene landscape, a daunting task is to understand how these genes contribute to dysregulated oncogenic pathways. Integration of cancer genes into networks offers opportunities to reveal protein–protein interactions (PPIs) with functional and therapeutic significance. Here, we report the generation of a cancer-focused PPI network, termed OncoPPi, and identification of >260 cancer-associated PPIs not in other large-scale interactomes. PPI hubs reveal new regulatory mechanisms for cancer genes like MYC, STK11, RASSF1 and CDK4. As example, the NSD3 (WHSC1L1)–MYC interaction suggests a new mechanism for NSD3/BRD4 chromatin complex regulation of MYC-driven tumours. Association of undruggable tumour suppressors with drug targets informs therapeutic options. Based on OncoPPi-derived STK11-CDK4 connectivity, we observe enhanced sensitivity of STK11-silenced lung cancer cells to the FDA-approved CDK4 inhibitor palbociclib. OncoPPi is a focused PPI resource that links cancer genes into a signalling network for discovery of PPI targets and network-implicated tumour vulnerabilities for therapeutic interrogation.