JCI Insight (Sep 2020)

ZZW-115–dependent inhibition of NUPR1 nuclear translocation sensitizes cancer cells to genotoxic agents

  • Wenjun Lan,
  • Patricia Santofimia-Castaño,
  • Mirna Swayden,
  • Yi Xia,
  • Zhengwei Zhou,
  • Stephane Audebert,
  • Luc Camoin,
  • Can Huang,
  • Ling Peng,
  • Ana Jiménez-Alesanco,
  • Adrián Velázquez-Campoy,
  • Olga Abián,
  • Gwen Lomberk,
  • Raul Urrutia,
  • Bruno Rizzuti,
  • Vincent Geli,
  • Philippe Soubeyran,
  • José L. Neira,
  • Juan Iovanna

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 18

Abstract

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Establishing the interactome of the cancer-associated stress protein Nuclear Protein 1 (NUPR1), we found that it binds to several hundreds of proteins, including proteins involved in nuclear translocation, DNA repair, and key factors of the SUMO pathway. We demonstrated that the NUPR1 inhibitor ZZW-115, an organic synthetic molecule, competes with importins for the binding to the NLS region of NUPR1, thereby inhibiting its nuclear translocation. We hypothesized, and then proved, that inhibition of NUPR1 by ZZW-115 sensitizes cancer cells to DNA damage induced by several genotoxic agents. Strikingly, we found that treatment with ZZW-115 reduced SUMOylation of several proteins involved in DNA damage response (DDR). We further report that the presence of recombinant NUPR1 improved the SUMOylation in a cell-free system, indicating that NUPR1 directly stimulates the SUMOylation machinery. We propose that ZZW-115 sensitizes cancer cells to genotoxic agents by inhibiting the nuclear translocation of NUPR1 and thereby decreasing the SUMOylation-dependent functions of key proteins involved in the DDR.

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