Cell Death and Disease (Jun 2022)

Furin extracellularly cleaves secreted PTENα/β to generate C-terminal fragment with a tumor-suppressive role

  • Cheng Zhang,
  • Hong-Ming Ma,
  • Shuang-Shu Dong,
  • Na Zhang,
  • Ping He,
  • Meng-Kai Ge,
  • Li Xia,
  • Jian-Xiu Yu,
  • Qiang Xia,
  • Guo-Qiang Chen,
  • Shao-Ming Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-022-04988-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract PTENα and PTENβ (PTENα/β), two long translational variants of phosphatase and tensin homolog on chromosome 10 (PTEN), exert distinct roles from canonical PTEN, including promoting carcinogenesis and accelerating immune-resistant cancer progression. However, their roles in carcinogenesis remain greatly unknown. Herein, we report that, after secreting into the extracellular space, PTENα/β proteins are efficiently cleaved into a short N-terminal and a long C-terminal fragment by the proprotein convertase Furin at a polyarginine stretch in their N-terminal extensions. Although secreted PTENα/β and their cleaved fragment cannot enter cells, treatment of the purified C-terminal fragment but not cleavage-resistant mutants of PTENα exerts a tumor-suppressive role in vivo. As a result, overexpression of cleavage-resistant PTENα mutants manifest a tumor-promoting role more profound than that of wild-type PTENα. In line with these, the C-terminal fragment is significantly downregulated in liver cancer tissues compared to paired normal tissues, which is consistent with the downregulated expression of Furin. Collectively, we show that extracellular PTENα/β present opposite effects on carcinogenesis from intracellular PTENα/β, and propose that the tumor-suppressive C-terminal fragment of PTENα/β might be used as exogenous agent to treat cancer.