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1.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961102

RESUMO

Molecular chaperones including the heat-shock protein 70-kilodalton (HSP70) family and the J-domain containing protein (JDP) co-chaperones maintain homeostatic balance in eukaryotic cells through regulation of the proteome. The expansive JDP family helps direct specific HSP70 functions, and yet loss of single JDP-encoding genes is widely tolerated by mammalian cells, suggesting a high degree of redundancy. By contrast, essential JDPs might carry out HSP70-independent functions or fill cell-context dependent, highly specialized roles within the proteostasis network. Using a genetic screen of JDPs in human cancer cell lines, we found the RNA recognition motif (RRM) containing DNAJC17 to be pan-essential and investigated the contribution of its structural domains to biochemical and cellular function. We found that the RRM exerts an auto-inhibitory effect on the ability of DNAJC17 to allosterically activate ATP hydrolysis by HSP70. The J-domain, but neither the RRM nor a distal C-terminal alpha helix are required to rescue cell viability after loss of endogenous DNAJC17 . Knockdown of DNAJC17 leads to relatively few conserved changes in the abundance of individual mRNAs, but instead deranges gene expression through exon skipping, primarily of genes involved in cell cycle progression. Concordant with cell viability experiments, the C-terminal portions of DNAJC17 are dispensable for restoring splicing and G2-M progression. Overall, our findings identify essential cellular JDPs and suggest that diversification in JDP structure extends the HSP70-JDP system to control divergent processes such as RNA splicing. Future investigations into the structural basis for auto-inhibition of the DNAJC17 J-domain and the molecular regulation of splicing by these components may provide insights on how conserved biochemical mechanisms can be programmed to fill unique, non-redundant cellular roles and broaden the scope of the proteostasis network.

2.
JCI Insight ; 7(23)2022 12 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36282590

RESUMO

Oncogenic FOXO1 gene fusions drive a subset of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) with poor survival; to date, these cancer drivers are therapeutically intractable. To identify new therapies for this disease, we undertook an isogenic CRISPR-interference screen to define PAX3-FOXO1-specific genetic dependencies and identified genes in the GATOR2 complex. GATOR2 loss in RMS abrogated aa-induced lysosomal localization of mTORC1 and consequent downstream signaling, slowing G1-S cell cycle transition. In vivo suppression of GATOR2 impaired the growth of tumor xenografts and favored the outgrowth of cells lacking PAX3-FOXO1. Loss of a subset of GATOR2 members can be compensated by direct genetic activation of mTORC1. RAS mutations are also sufficient to decouple mTORC1 activation from GATOR2, and indeed, fusion-negative RMS harboring such mutations exhibit aa-independent mTORC1 activity. A bisteric, mTORC1-selective small molecule induced tumor regressions in fusion-positive patient-derived tumor xenografts. These findings highlight a vulnerability in FOXO1 fusion-positive RMS and provide rationale for the clinical evaluation of bisteric mTORC1 inhibitors, currently in phase I testing, to treat this disease. Isogenic genetic screens can, thus, identify potentially exploitable vulnerabilities in fusion-driven pediatric cancers that otherwise remain mostly undruggable.


Assuntos
Neoplasias , Criança , Humanos , Alvo Mecanístico do Complexo 1 de Rapamicina/genética , Proteína Forkhead Box O1/genética
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