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A tumor-specific kinase activity regulates the viral death protein Apoptin. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Apoptin is a protein from the chicken anemia virus that induces cell death (apoptosis) in tumor cells but not in healthy cells, suggesting it's activated by a cancer-specific pathway.
  • Researchers found that Apoptin gets heavily phosphorylated in cancer cells at threonine 108, which is critical for its tumor-targeting properties.
  • A mutation in this phosphorylation site allows Apoptin to kill normal cells, indicating that the mechanisms controlling its activity could play a role in the development of cancer.

Article Abstract

Apoptin, a chicken anemia virus-encoded protein, is thought to be activated by a general tumor-specific pathway, because it induces apoptosis in a large number of human tumor or transformed cells but not in their normal, healthy counterparts. Here, we show that Apoptin is phosphorylated robustly both in vitro and in vivo in tumor cells but negligibly in normal cells, and we map the site to threonine 108. A gain-of-function point mutation (T108E) conferred upon Apoptin the ability to accumulate in the nucleus and kill normal cells, implying that phosphorylation is a key regulator of the tumor-specific properties of Apoptin. An activity that could phosphorylate Apoptin on threonine 108 was found specifically in tumor and transformed cells from a variety of tissue origins, suggesting that activation of this kinase is generally associated with the cancerous or pre-cancerous state. Moreover, analyses of human tissue samples confirm that Apoptin kinase activity is detectable in primary malignancies but not in tissue derived from healthy individuals. Taken together, our results support a model whereby the dysregulation of the cellular pathway leading to the phosphorylation of Apoptin contributes to human tumorigenesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M208557200DOI Listing

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