Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B (Mar 2022)

WSB1 regulates c-Myc expression through β-catenin signaling and forms a feedforward circuit

  • Xiaomeng Gao,
  • Jieqiong You,
  • Yanling Gong,
  • Meng Yuan,
  • Haiying Zhu,
  • Liang Fang,
  • Hong Zhu,
  • Meidan Ying,
  • Qiaojun He,
  • Bo Yang,
  • Ji Cao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 1225 – 1239

Abstract

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The dysregulation of transcription factors is widely associated with tumorigenesis. As the most well-defined transcription factor in multiple types of cancer, c-Myc can transform cells by transactivating various downstream genes. Given that there is no effective way to directly inhibit c-Myc, c-Myc targeting strategies hold great potential for cancer therapy. In this study, we found that WSB1, which has a highly positive correlation with c-Myc in 10 cancer cell lines and clinical samples, is a direct target gene of c-Myc, and can positively regulate c-Myc expression, which forms a feedforward circuit promoting cancer development. RNA sequencing results from Bel-7402 cells confirmed that WSB1 promoted c-Myc expression through the β-catenin pathway. Mechanistically, WSB1 affected β-catenin destruction complex-PPP2CA assembly and E3 ubiquitin ligase adaptor β-TRCP recruitment, which inhibited the ubiquitination of β-catenin and transactivated c-Myc. Of interest, the effect of WSB1 on c-Myc was independent of its E3 ligase activity. Moreover, overexpressing WSB1 in the Bel-7402 xenograft model could further strengthen the tumor-driven effect of c-Myc overexpression. Thus, our findings revealed a novel mechanism involved in tumorigenesis in which the WSB1/c-Myc feedforward circuit played an essential role, highlighting a potential c-Myc intervention strategy in cancer treatment.

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