MYC is a critical target of FBXW7

Mai Sato, Ruth Rodriguez-Barrueco, Jiyang Yu, Catherine Do, Jose M. Silva, Jean Gautier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

39 Scopus citations

Abstract

MYC deregulation is a driver of many human cancers. Altering the balance of MYC protein levels at the level of transcription, protein stability, or turnover is sufficient to transform cells to a tumorigenic phenotype. While direct targeting of MYC is difficult, specific genetic vulnerabilities of MYC-deregulated cells could be exploited to selectively inhibit their growth. Using a genome-wide shRNA screen, we identified 78 candidate genes, which are required for survival of human mammary epithelial cells with elevated MYC levels. Among the candidates, we validated and characterized FBXW7, a component of the SCF-like ubiquitin ligase complex that targets MYC for proteasomal degradation. Down-regulation of FBXW7 leads to synergistic accumulation of cellular and active chromatin-bound MYC, while protein levels of other FBXW7 targets appear unaffected. Over a four-week time course, continuous FBXW7 down-regulation and MYC activation together cause an accumulation of cells in S-phase and G2/M-phase of the cell cycle. Under these conditions, we also observe elevated chromatin-bound levels of CDC45, suggesting increased DNA replication stress. Consistent with these results, FBXW7 down-regulation alone decreases the survival of T47D breast cancer cells. These results establish that FBXW7 downregulation is synthetic lethal with MYC, and that MYC is a critical target of FBXW7 in breast epithelial cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3292-3305
Number of pages14
JournalOncotarget
Volume6
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2015

Keywords

  • CDC45
  • FBXW7
  • MCF10A
  • MYC
  • Synthetic lethality

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