Reciprocal signaling between mTORC1 and MNK2 controls cell growth and oncogenesis

被引:0
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作者
Jianling Xie
Kaikai Shen
Ashley T. Jones
Jian Yang
Andrew R. Tee
Ming Hong Shen
Mengyuan Yu
Swati Irani
Derick Wong
James E. Merrett
Roman V. Lenchine
Stuart De Poi
Kirk B. Jensen
Paul J. Trim
Marten F. Snel
Makoto Kamei
Sally Kim Martin
Stephen Fitter
Shuye Tian
Xuemin Wang
Lisa M. Butler
Andrew C. W. Zannettino
Christopher G. Proud
机构
[1] South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute,Lifelong Health Theme
[2] Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit,School of Basic Medical Sciences
[3] Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine,Division of Cancer and Genetics
[4] Cardiff University,Adelaide Medical School and Freemasons Foundation Centre for Men’s Health
[5] Heath Park,Precision Medicine Theme
[6] University of Adelaide,Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
[7] South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute,Hopwood Centre for Neurobiology
[8] University of Adelaide,Myeloma Research Laboratory, Adelaide Medical School, Faculty of Health and Medical Science
[9] South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute,Department of Biology
[10] University of Adelaide,undefined
[11] Southern University of Science and Technology,undefined
来源
关键词
Rapamycin; Prostate cancer; eIF4E; Protein synthesis; mRNA translation;
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学科分类号
摘要
eIF4E plays key roles in protein synthesis and tumorigenesis. It is phosphorylated by the kinases MNK1 and MNK2. Binding of MNKs to eIF4G enhances their ability to phosphorylate eIF4E. Here, we show that mTORC1, a key regulator of mRNA translation and oncogenesis, directly phosphorylates MNK2 on Ser74. This suppresses MNK2 activity and impairs binding of MNK2 to eIF4G. These effects provide a novel mechanism by which mTORC1 signaling impairs the function of MNK2 and thereby decreases eIF4E phosphorylation. MNK2[S74A] knock-in cells show enhanced phosphorylation of eIF4E and S6K1 (i.e., increased mTORC1 signaling), enlarged cell size, and increased invasive and transformative capacities. MNK2[Ser74] phosphorylation was inversely correlated with disease progression in human prostate tumors. MNK inhibition exerted anti-proliferative effects in prostate cancer cells in vitro. These findings define a novel feedback loop whereby mTORC1 represses MNK2 activity and oncogenic signaling through eIF4E phosphorylation, allowing reciprocal regulation of these two oncogenic pathways.
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页码:249 / 270
页数:21
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