Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension KnowledgeBase (bioinfom_tsdb)
bioinfom_tsdb
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension KnowledgeBase
General information | Literature | Expression | Regulation | Mutation | Interaction

Basic Information

Gene ID

139285

Name

AMER1

Synonymous

FAM123B|OSCS|WTX;APC membrane recruitment protein 1;AMER1;APC membrane recruitment protein 1

Definition

RP11-403E24.2|Wilms tumor gene on the X chromosome protein|Wilms tumor on the X|adenomatous polyposis coli membrane recruitment 1|family with sequence similarity 123B|protein FAM123B

Position

Xq11.2

Gene type

protein-coding

Title

Abstract

Wilms tumor suppressor WTX negatively regulates WNT/beta-catenin signaling.

Aberrant WNT signal transduction is involved in many diseases. In colorectal cancer and melanoma, mutational disruption of proteins involved in the degradation of beta-catenin, the key effector of the WNT signaling pathway, results in stabilization of beta-catenin and, in turn, activation of transcription. We have used tandem-affinity protein purification and mass spectrometry to define the protein interaction network of the beta-catenin destruction complex. This assay revealed that WTX, a protein encoded by a gene mutated in Wilms tumors, forms a complex with beta-catenin, AXIN1, beta-TrCP2 (beta-transducin repeat-containing protein 2), and APC (adenomatous polyposis coli). Functional analyses in cultured cells, Xenopus, and zebrafish demonstrate that WTX promotes beta-catenin ubiquitination and degradation, which antagonize WNT/beta-catenin signaling. These data provide a possible mechanistic explanation for the tumor suppressor activity of WTX.

[The tumor suppressor gene WTX, mutated in Wilms tumours, is a member of the beta-catenin destruction complex].

The tumor suppressor phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN) plays distinct growth-regulatory roles in the cytoplasm and nucleus. It has been shown to be preferentially localized to the nucleus in differentiated or resting cells, and to the cytoplasm in advanced tumor cells. Thus, the regulation of PTENs subcellular localization seems to be critical to its tumor-suppressing functions. In this study, we showed that activation of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K) pathway triggers PTENs cell cycle-dependent chromosome region maintenance 1-mediated nuclear export, as PTEN was predominantly expressed in the cytoplasm of TSC2(-/-) mouse embryo fibroblasts or activated Akt mutant-transfected NIH3T3 cells. In contrast, dominant-negative mutants of Akt and pharmacologic inhibitors of PI3K, mTOR, and S6K1, but not of MEK, suppressed the nuclear export of PTEN during the G(1)-S transition. The nuclear-cytoplasmic trafficking of exogenous PTEN is likewise regulated by the PI3K cascade in PTEN-null U251MG cells. The nuclear export of PTEN could also be blocked by short interfering RNA to S6K1/2. In addition, PTEN interacts with both S6K1 and S6K2. Taken together, our findings strongly indicate that activation of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR/S6K cascade, specifically S6K1/2, is pivotal in regulating the subcellular localization of PTEN. This scenario exemplifies a reciprocal regulation between PI3K and PTEN that defines a novel negative-feedback loop in cell cycle progression.

Tumor suppressor WTX gene mutation is rare in acute leukemias.

By using a functional complementation approach, suppression of tumorigenicity was observed after transfer of intact or truncated copies of chromosome 3 into a nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) HONE1 cell line. The extra exogenous chromosome 3 in the microcell hybrids (MCHs) significantly extended the lag period of tumor formation, which may be associated with loss or inactivation of wild type alleles from the normal donor chromosome 3. Representative tumors, which grew in nude mice were reconstituted into culture and expanded as tumor segregants (TSs). In our study, a disintegrin-like and metalloprotease with thrombospondin type 1 motif 9 (ADAMTS9), a gene mapping to 3p14.2, was identified to be critically associated with tumor suppression in NPC. gene expression analysis showed that ADAMTS9 was either not expressed or was downregulated in HONE1 cells, TSs and NPC cell lines. The mechanism of ADAMTS9 gene inactivation in the NPC cell lines and tissues was attributed to promoter hypermethylation. Using a tissue microarray and immunohistochemical staining, 31 of 66 (47%) of the NPC cases showed downregulated or absence of ADAMTS9 expression. ADAMTS9 expression was downregulated or lost in 17 of 23 (73.9%) lymph node metastatic NPC specimens, which was significantly higher than in 14 of 43 (32.6%) primary tumors. After transfection of the ADAMTS9 gene into 7 NPC cell lines, a dramatic reduction of colony forming ability was observed. These findings support ADAMTS9 as a putative tumor suppressor gene in vivo in NPC that is significantly associated with lymph node metastases.

The tumor suppressor WTX shuttles to the nucleus and modulates WT1 activity.

WTX encodes a tumor suppressor gene inactivated in Wilms tumor and recently implicated in WNT signaling through enhancement of cytoplasmic beta-catenin (CTNNB1) degradation. Here, we report that WTX translocates to the nucleus, a property that is modified by an endogenous splicing variant and is modulated by a nuclear export inhibitor. WTX is present in distinct subnuclear structures and co-localizes with the paraspeckle marker p54NRB/NONO, suggesting a role in transcriptional regulation. Notably, WTX binds WT1, another Wilms tumor suppressor and stem cell marker that encodes a zinc-finger transcription factor, and enhances WT1-mediated transcription of Amphiregulin, an endogenous target gene. Together, these observations suggest a role for WTX in nuclear pathways implicated in the transcriptional regulation of cellular differentiation programs.

Functional characterization of Wilms tumor-suppressor WTX and tumor-associated mutants.

The WTX, Wilms tumor-associated tumor-suppressor gene, is present on the X chromosome and a single WTX mutation may be sufficient to promote carcinogenesis. Unlike the WT1 tumor suppressor, a transcription factor, WTX lacks conserved functional protein domains. To study the function of WTX, we constructed inducible cell lines expressing WTX and tumor-associated WTX mutants. Induction of WTX inhibited cell growth and caused G(1)/G(0) arrest. In contrast, a short, tumor-associated truncation mutant of WTX358 only slightly inhibited cell growth without a significant cell-cycle arrest, although expression of a longer truncation mutant WTX565 led to the growth inhibition and cell-cycle arrest to a similar extent as wild-type WTX. Like WT1, WTX slowed growth and caused cell-cycle arrest through p21 induction. gene expression profiling showed that these two tumor-suppressors regulated genes in similar pathways, including those implicated in control of the cellular growth, cell cycle, cell death, cancer and cardiovascular system development. When gene expression changes mediated by wild-type WTX were compared with those affected by mutant forms, WTX565 showed a 55% overlap (228 genes) in differentially regulated genes, whereas WTX358 regulated only two genes affected by wild-type WTX, implying that amino-acid residues 358-561 are critical for WTX function.

The WTX tumor suppressor regulates mesenchymal progenitor cell fate specification.

WTX is an X-linked tumor suppressor targeted by somatic mutations in Wilms tumor, a pediatric kidney cancer, and by germline inactivation in osteopathia striata with cranial sclerosis, a bone overgrowth syndrome. Here, we show that Wtx deletion in mice causes neonatal lethality, somatic overgrowth, and malformation of multiple mesenchyme-derived tissues, including bone, fat, kidney, heart, and spleen. Inactivation of Wtx at different developmental stages and in primary mesenchymal progenitor cells (MPCs) reveals that bone mass increase and adipose tissue deficiency are due to altered lineage fate decisions coupled with delayed terminal differentiation. Specification defects in MPCs result from aberrant beta-catenin activation, whereas alternative pathways contribute to the subsequently delayed differentiation of lineage-restricted cells. Thus, Wtx is a regulator of MPC commitment and differentiation with stage-specific functions in inhibiting canonical Wnt signaling. Furthermore, the constellation of anomalies in Wtx null mice suggests that this tumor suppressor broadly regulates MPCs in multiple tissues.

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