Cullin5 deficiency promotes small-cell lung cancer metastasis by stabilizing integrin β1

Gaoxiang Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liyan Gong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dan Su(Zhejiang Cancer Hospital), Yujuan Jin(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chenchen Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Meiting Yue(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shun Yao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhen Qin(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yi Ye(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ying Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qibiao Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jian Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Binghai Cui(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiurong Ding(Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health), Hsin‐Yi Huang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liang Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuting Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Peiyuan Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guohong Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Luonan Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kwok‐Kin Wong(NYU Langone Health), Daming Gao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongbin Ji(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
January 27, 2019
Cited by 105Open Access
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Abstract

Metastasis is the dominant cause of patient death in small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), and a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying SCLC metastasis may potentially improve clinical treatment. Through genome-scale screening for key regulators of mouse Rb1-/- Trp53-/- SCLC metastasis using the pooled CRISPR/Cas9 library, we identified Cullin5 (CUL5) and suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3), two components of the Cullin-RING E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, as top candidates. Mechanistically, the deficiency of CUL5 or SOCS3 disrupted the functional formation of the E3 ligase complex and prevented the degradation of integrin β1, which stabilized integrin β1 and activated downstream focal adhesion kinase/SRC (FAK/SRC) signaling and eventually drove SCLC metastasis. Low expression levels of CUL5 and SOCS3 were significantly associated with high integrin β1 levels and poor prognosis in a large cohort of 128 clinical patients with SCLC. Moreover, the CUL5-deficient SCLCs were vulnerable to the treatment of the FDA-approved SRC inhibitor dasatinib. Collectively, this work identifies the essential role of CUL5- and SOCS3-mediated integrin β1 turnover in controlling SCLC metastasis, which might have therapeutic implications.


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