The ubiquitin ligase adaptor SPOP in cancer
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2019 papers
Abstract
The dysregulation of ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation has emerged as an important mechanism of pathogenesis in several cancers. The speckle-type POZ protein (SPOP) functions as a substrate adaptor for the cullin3-RING ubiquitin ligase and controls the cellular persistence of a diverse array of protein substrates in hormone signalling, epigenetic control and cell cycle regulation, to name a few. Mutations in SPOP and the resulting dysregulation of this proteostatic pathway play causative roles in the pathogenesis of prostate and endometrial cancers, whereas overexpression and mislocalization are associated with kidney cancer. Understanding the molecular mechanism of the normal function of SPOP as well as the cause of SPOP-mediated oncogenesis is thus critical for eventual therapeutic targeting of SPOP and other related pathways. Here, we will review SPOP structure, function and the molecular mechanism of how this function is achieved. We will then review how mutations and protein mislocalization contribute to cancer pathogenesis and will provide a perspective on how SPOP may be targeted therapeutically.
Related Papers
- → Regulation of ubiquitin‐dependent processes by deubiquitinating enzymes(1997)578 cited
- → Tools to investigate the ubiquitin proteasome system(2017)84 cited
- → PPPDE1 is a novel deubiquitinase belonging to a cysteine isopeptidase family(2017)25 cited
- → Deubiquitinating Enzymes: Their Functions and Substrate Specificity(2004)59 cited
- → Structural aspects of recently discovered viral deubiquitinating activities(2006)20 cited