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Synthetic essentiality of chromatin remodelling factor CHD1 in PTEN-deficient cancer.

Authors :
Zhao D
Lu X
Wang G
Lan Z
Liao W
Li J
Liang X
Chen JR
Shah S
Shang X
Tang M
Deng P
Dey P
Chakravarti D
Chen P
Spring DJ
Navone NM
Troncoso P
Zhang J
Wang YA
DePinho RA
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2017 Feb 23; Vol. 542 (7642), pp. 484-488. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Feb 06.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Synthetic lethality and collateral lethality are two well-validated conceptual strategies for identifying therapeutic targets in cancers with tumour-suppressor gene deletions. Here, we explore an approach to identify potential synthetic-lethal interactions by screening mutually exclusive deletion patterns in cancer genomes. We sought to identify 'synthetic-essential' genes: those that are occasionally deleted in some cancers but are almost always retained in the context of a specific tumour-suppressor deficiency. We also posited that such synthetic-essential genes would be therapeutic targets in cancers that harbour specific tumour-suppressor deficiencies. In addition to known synthetic-lethal interactions, this approach uncovered the chromatin helicase DNA-binding factor CHD1 as a putative synthetic-essential gene in PTEN-deficient cancers. In PTEN-deficient prostate and breast cancers, CHD1 depletion profoundly and specifically suppressed cell proliferation, cell survival and tumorigenic potential. Mechanistically, functional PTEN stimulates the GSK3β-mediated phosphorylation of CHD1 degron domains, which promotes CHD1 degradation via the β-TrCP-mediated ubiquitination-proteasome pathway. Conversely, PTEN deficiency results in stabilization of CHD1, which in turn engages the trimethyl lysine-4 histone H3 modification to activate transcription of the pro-tumorigenic TNF-NF-κB gene network. This study identifies a novel PTEN pathway in cancer and provides a framework for the discovery of 'trackable' targets in cancers that harbour specific tumour-suppressor deficiencies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
542
Issue :
7642
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28166537
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature21357