CHK2-FOXK axis promotes transcriptional control of autophagy programs

Yuping Chen(Tongji University), Jinhuan Wu(Tongji University), Guang Liang(Wenzhou Medical University), Guohe Geng(Wenzhou Medical University), Fei Zhao(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Ping Yin(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Somaira Nowsheen(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Chengming Wu(Tongji University), Yunhui Li(Tongji University), Lei Li(Tongji University), Wootae Kim(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Qin Zhou(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Jinzhou Huang(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Jiaqi Liu(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Chao Zhang(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Guijie Guo(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Min Deng(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Xinyi Tu(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Xiumei Gao(Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Zhongmin Liu(Tongji University), Yihan Chen(Tongji University), Zhenkun Lou(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Kuntian Luo(Tongji University), Jian Yuan(Tongji University)
Science Advances
January 2, 2020
Cited by 65Open Access
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Abstract

Autophagy is an evolutionarily conserved catabolic process, which plays a vital role in removing misfolded proteins and clearing damaged organelles to maintain internal environment homeostasis. Here, we uncovered the checkpoint kinase 2 (CHK2)-FOXK (FOXK1 and FOXK2) axis playing an important role in DNA damage-mediated autophagy at the transcriptional regulation layer. Mechanistically, following DNA damage, CHK2 phosphorylates FOXK and creates a 14-3-3γ binding site, which, in turn, traps FOXK proteins in the cytoplasm. Because FOXK functions as the transcription suppressor of ATGs, DNA damage-mediated FOXKs' cytoplasmic trapping induces autophagy. In addition, we found that a cancer-derived FOXK mutation induces FOXK hyperphosphorylation and enhances autophagy, resulting in chemoresistance. Cotreatment with cisplatin and chloroquine overcomes the chemoresistance caused by FOXK mutation. Overall, our study highlights a mechanism whereby DNA damage triggers autophagy by increasing autophagy genes via CHK2-FOXK-mediated transcriptional control, and misregulation of this pathway contributes to chemoresistance.


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