Reciprocal antagonism of PIN1-APC/CCDH1 governs mitotic protein stability and cell cycle entry

Author:

Ke Shizhong,Dang FabinORCID,Wang LinORCID,Chen Jia-Yun,Naik Mandar T.,Li WenxueORCID,Thavamani Abhishek,Kim Nami,Naik Nandita M.,Sui Huaxiu,Tang Wei,Qiu Chenxi,Koikawa Kazuhiro,Batalini FelipeORCID,Stern Gatof Emily,Isaza Daniela Arango,Patel Jaymin M.ORCID,Wang Xiaodong,Clohessy John G.ORCID,Heng Yujing J.ORCID,Lahav Galit,Liu YanshengORCID,Gray Nathanael S.ORCID,Zhou Xiao Zhen,Wei Wenyi,Wulf Gerburg M.ORCID,Lu Kun PingORCID

Abstract

AbstractInduced oncoproteins degradation provides an attractive anti-cancer modality. Activation of anaphase-promoting complex (APC/CCDH1) prevents cell-cycle entry by targeting crucial mitotic proteins for degradation. Phosphorylation of its co-activator CDH1 modulates the E3 ligase activity, but little is known about its regulation after phosphorylation and how to effectively harness APC/CCDH1 activity to treat cancer. Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase NIMA-interacting 1 (PIN1)-catalyzed phosphorylation-dependent cis-trans prolyl isomerization drives tumor malignancy. However, the mechanisms controlling its protein turnover remain elusive. Through proteomic screens and structural characterizations, we identify a reciprocal antagonism of PIN1-APC/CCDH1 mediated by domain-oriented phosphorylation-dependent dual interactions as a fundamental mechanism governing mitotic protein stability and cell-cycle entry. Remarkably, combined PIN1 and cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) inhibition creates a positive feedback loop of PIN1 inhibition and APC/CCDH1 activation to irreversibly degrade PIN1 and other crucial mitotic proteins, which force permanent cell-cycle exit and trigger anti-tumor immunity, translating into synergistic efficacy against triple-negative breast cancer.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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