Author:
Shaw Timothy I.,Dong Li,Tian Liqing,Qian Chenxi,Liu Yu,Ju Bensheng,High Anthony,Kavdia Kanisha,Pagala Vishwajeeth R.,Shaner Bridget,Pei Deqing,Easton John,Janke Laura J.,Porter Shaina N.,Ma Xiaotu,Cheng Cheng,Pruett-Miller Shondra M.,Choi John,Yu Jiyang,Peng Junmin,Gu Wei,Look A. Thomas,Downing James R.,Zhang Jinghui
Abstract
AbstractUSP7, which encodes a deubiquitylating enzyme, is among the most frequently mutated genes in pediatric T-ALL, with somatic heterozygous loss-of-function mutations (haploinsufficiency) predominantly affecting the subgroup that has aberrant TAL1 oncogene activation. Network analysis of > 200 T-ALL transcriptomes linked USP7 haploinsufficiency with decreased activities of E-proteins. E-proteins are also negatively regulated by TAL1, leading to concerted down-regulation of E-protein target genes involved in T-cell development. In T-ALL cell lines, we showed the physical interaction of USP7 with E-proteins and TAL1 by mass spectrometry and ChIP-seq. Haploinsufficient but not complete CRISPR knock-out of USP7 showed accelerated cell growth and validated transcriptional down-regulation of E-protein targets. Our study unveiled the synergistic effect of USP7 haploinsufficiency with aberrant TAL1 activation on T-ALL, implicating USP7 as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor in T-ALL. Our findings caution against a universal oncogene designation for USP7 while emphasizing the dosage-dependent consequences of USP7 inhibitors currently under development as potential cancer therapeutics.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
10 articles.
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