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General information | Expression | Regulation | Mutation | Interaction |
Basic Information |
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Gene ID | 3728 |
Name | JUP |
Synonymous | ARVD12|CTNNG|DP3|DPIII|PDGB|PKGB;junction plakoglobin;JUP;junction plakoglobin |
Definition | catenin (cadherin-associated protein), gamma (80kD)|catenin (cadherin-associated protein), gamma 80kDa|catenin gamma|desmoplakin III|desmoplakin-3|gamma-catenin |
Position | 17q21 |
Gene type | protein-coding |
Source | Count: 1; Generif |
Sentence |
Abstract |
function as an inhibitor of beta-catenin/TCF-dependent gene transcription and role as a potentially novel tumor suppressor protein in a subset of human NSCLC cancers | Lung cancer is a heterogeneous disease categorized into multiple subtypes of cancers which likely arise from distinct patterns of genetic alterations and disruptions. Precedent exists for a role of beta-catenin, a downstream component of the Wnt signaling pathway that serves as a transcriptional co-activator with TCF/LEF, in several human cancers including colon carcinomas. In this study, we observed that beta-catenin was highly and uniformly expressed in a panel of NSCLC cell lines and primary lung tumors. By contrast, gamma-catenin was weakly expressed or absent in several NSCLC cell lines and immunohistochemical analysis of primary NSCLC tumors revealed negligible to weak gamma-catenin staining in approximately 30% of the specimens. Treatment of NSCLC cells expressing reduced gamma-catenin protein with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (5aza2dc), a DNA methylation inhibitor, or trichostatin A (TSA), a histone deacetylase inhibitor, increased gamma-catenin protein content in NSCLC cells with low gamma-catenin expression. Significantly, the activity of a beta-catenin/TCF-dependent luciferase reporter was markedly elevated in the NSCLC cell lines that underexpressed gamma-catenin relative to those lines that highly expressed gamma-catenin. Moreover, transfection of these cells with a gamma-catenin expression plasmid reduced the elevated TCF activity by 85% and strongly inhibited cell growth on tissue culture plastic as well as anchorage-independent growth in soft agar. This study shows that gamma-catenin can function as an inhibitor of beta-catenin/TCF-dependent gene transcription and highlights gamma-catenin as a potentially novel tumor suppressor protein in a subset of human NSCLC cancers. |
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