Cell Reports (Oct 2016)

The SIRT2 Deacetylase Stabilizes Slug to Control Malignancy of Basal-like Breast Cancer

  • Wenhui Zhou,
  • Thomas K. Ni,
  • Ania Wronski,
  • Benjamin Glass,
  • Adam Skibinski,
  • Andrew Beck,
  • Charlotte Kuperwasser

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
pp. 1302 – 1317

Abstract

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Summary: Overabundance of Slug protein is common in human cancer and represents an important determinant underlying the aggressiveness of basal-like breast cancer (BLBC). Despite its importance, this transcription factor is rarely mutated in BLBC, and the mechanism of its deregulation in cancer remains unknown. Here, we report that Slug undergoes acetylation-dependent protein degradation and identify the deacetylase SIRT2 as a key mediator of this post-translational mechanism. SIRT2 inhibition rapidly destabilizes Slug, whereas SIRT2 overexpression extends Slug stability. We show that SIRT2 deacetylates Slug protein at lysine residue K116 to prevent Slug degradation. Interestingly, SIRT2 is frequently amplified and highly expressed in BLBC. Genetic depletion and pharmacological inactivation of SIRT2 in BLBC cells reverse Slug stabilization, cause the loss of clinically relevant pathological features of BLBC, and inhibit tumor growth. Our results suggest that targeting SIRT2 may be a rational strategy for diminishing Slug abundance and its associated malignant traits in BLBC. : Zhou et al. show that the deacetylase SIRT2 inhibits acetylation-dependent degradation of Slug protein. In breast cancer, frequent SIRT2 overexpression extends Slug stability, conferring aggressive, basal-like malignant features and growth. Keywords: protein stability, acetylation, deacetylase, SIRT2, Slug, basal-like breast cancer, sirtinol, triple-negative breast cancer