Sprouty2, PTEN, and PP2A interact to regulate prostate cancer progression

Rachana Patel(Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute), Meiling Gao(Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute), Imran Ahmad(University of Glasgow), Janis Fleming(Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute), Lukram Babloo Singh(Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute), Taranjit Singh(University of Glasgow), Arthur B. McKie(University of Birmingham), Morag Seywright(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Robert J. Barnetson(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Joanne Edwards(University of Glasgow), Owen J. Sansom(Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute), Hing Y. Leung(University of Glasgow)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
February 21, 2013
Cited by 92Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Concurrent activation of RAS/ERK and PI3K/AKT pathways is implicated in prostate cancer progression. The negative regulators of these pathways, including sprouty2 (SPRY2), protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), and phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN), are commonly inactivated in prostate cancer. The molecular basis of cooperation between these genetic alterations is unknown. Here, we show that SPRY2 deficiency alone triggers activation of AKT and ERK, but this is insufficient to drive tumorigenesis. In addition to AKT and ERK activation, SPRY2 loss also activates a PP2A-dependent tumor suppressor checkpoint. Mechanistically, the PP2A-mediated growth arrest depends on GSK3β and is ultimately mediated by nuclear PTEN. In murine prostate cancer models, Pten haploinsufficiency synergized with Spry2 deficiency to drive tumorigenesis, including metastasis. Together, these results show that loss of Pten cooperates with Spry2 deficiency by bypassing a novel tumor suppressor checkpoint. Furthermore, loss of SPRY2 expression correlates strongly with loss of PTEN and/or PP2A subunits in human prostate cancer. This underlines the cooperation between SPRY2 deficiency and PTEN or PP2A inactivation in promoting tumorigenesis. Overall, we propose SPRY2, PTEN, and PP2A status as an important determinant of prostate cancer progression. Characterization of this trio may facilitate patient stratification for targeted therapies and chemopreventive interventions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis