Author:
Sharma Samanta,Zhang Tian,Michowski Wojciech,Rebecca Vito W.,Xiao Min,Ferretti Roberta,Suski Jan M.,Bronson Roderick T.,Paulo Joao A.,Frederick Dennie,Fassl Anne,Boland Genevieve M.,Geng Yan,Lees Jacqueline A.,Medema Rene H.,Herlyn Meenhard,Gygi Steven P.,Sicinski Piotr
Abstract
The cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5), originally described as a neuronal-specific kinase, is also frequently activated in human cancers. Using conditional CDK5 knockout mice and a mouse model of highly metastatic melanoma, we found that CDK5 is dispensable for the growth of primary tumors. However, we observed that ablation of CDK5 completely abrogated the metastasis, revealing that CDK5 is essential for the metastatic spread. In mouse and human melanoma cells CDK5 promotes cell invasiveness by directly phosphorylating an intermediate filament protein, vimentin, thereby inhibiting assembly of vimentin filaments. Chemical inhibition of CDK5 blocks the metastatic spread of patient-derived melanomas in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) mouse models. Hence, inhibition of CDK5 might represent a very potent therapeutic strategy to impede the metastatic dissemination of malignant cells.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
22 articles.
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