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Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations

The Birt-Hogg-Dube disease occurs as a result of germline mutations in the human Folliculin gene (FLCN), and is characterized by clinical features including fibrofolliculomas, lung cysts and multifocal renal neoplasia. Clinical and genetic evidence suggest that FLCN acts as a tumor suppressor gene....

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Autores principales: Laviolette, Laura A., Wilson, Jonas, Koller, Julia, Neil, Christopher, Hulick, Peter, Rejtar, Tomas, Karger, Barry, Teh, Bin Tean, Iliopoulos, Othon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3708955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066775
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author Laviolette, Laura A.
Wilson, Jonas
Koller, Julia
Neil, Christopher
Hulick, Peter
Rejtar, Tomas
Karger, Barry
Teh, Bin Tean
Iliopoulos, Othon
author_facet Laviolette, Laura A.
Wilson, Jonas
Koller, Julia
Neil, Christopher
Hulick, Peter
Rejtar, Tomas
Karger, Barry
Teh, Bin Tean
Iliopoulos, Othon
author_sort Laviolette, Laura A.
collection PubMed
description The Birt-Hogg-Dube disease occurs as a result of germline mutations in the human Folliculin gene (FLCN), and is characterized by clinical features including fibrofolliculomas, lung cysts and multifocal renal neoplasia. Clinical and genetic evidence suggest that FLCN acts as a tumor suppressor gene. The human cell line UOK257, derived from the renal cell carcinoma of a patient with a germline mutation in the FLCN gene, harbors a truncated version of the FLCN protein. Reconstitution of the wild type FLCN protein into UOK257 cells delays cell cycle progression, due to a slower progression through the late S and G2/M-phases. Similarly, Flcn (–/–) mouse embryonic fibroblasts progress more rapidly through the cell cycle than wild type controls (Flcn (flox/flox)). The reintroduction of tumor-associated FLCN mutants (FLCN ΔF157, FLCN 1–469 or FLCN K508R) fails to delay cell cycle progression in UOK257 cells. Additionally, FLCN phosphorylation (on Serines 62 and 73) fluctuates throughout the cell cycle and peaks during the G2/M phase in cells treated with nocodazole. In keeping with this observation, the reintroduction of a FLCN phosphomimetic mutant into the UOK257 cell line results in faster progression through the cell cycle compared to those expressing the wild type FLCN protein. These findings suggest that the tumor suppression function of FLCN may be linked to its impact on the cell cycle and that FLCN phosphorylation is important for this activity. Additionally, these observations describe a novel in vitro assay for testing the functional significance of FLCN mutations and/or genetic polymorphisms.
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spelling pubmed-37089552013-07-19 Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations Laviolette, Laura A. Wilson, Jonas Koller, Julia Neil, Christopher Hulick, Peter Rejtar, Tomas Karger, Barry Teh, Bin Tean Iliopoulos, Othon PLoS One Research Article The Birt-Hogg-Dube disease occurs as a result of germline mutations in the human Folliculin gene (FLCN), and is characterized by clinical features including fibrofolliculomas, lung cysts and multifocal renal neoplasia. Clinical and genetic evidence suggest that FLCN acts as a tumor suppressor gene. The human cell line UOK257, derived from the renal cell carcinoma of a patient with a germline mutation in the FLCN gene, harbors a truncated version of the FLCN protein. Reconstitution of the wild type FLCN protein into UOK257 cells delays cell cycle progression, due to a slower progression through the late S and G2/M-phases. Similarly, Flcn (–/–) mouse embryonic fibroblasts progress more rapidly through the cell cycle than wild type controls (Flcn (flox/flox)). The reintroduction of tumor-associated FLCN mutants (FLCN ΔF157, FLCN 1–469 or FLCN K508R) fails to delay cell cycle progression in UOK257 cells. Additionally, FLCN phosphorylation (on Serines 62 and 73) fluctuates throughout the cell cycle and peaks during the G2/M phase in cells treated with nocodazole. In keeping with this observation, the reintroduction of a FLCN phosphomimetic mutant into the UOK257 cell line results in faster progression through the cell cycle compared to those expressing the wild type FLCN protein. These findings suggest that the tumor suppression function of FLCN may be linked to its impact on the cell cycle and that FLCN phosphorylation is important for this activity. Additionally, these observations describe a novel in vitro assay for testing the functional significance of FLCN mutations and/or genetic polymorphisms. Public Library of Science 2013-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3708955/ /pubmed/23874397 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066775 Text en © 2013 Laviolette et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Laviolette, Laura A.
Wilson, Jonas
Koller, Julia
Neil, Christopher
Hulick, Peter
Rejtar, Tomas
Karger, Barry
Teh, Bin Tean
Iliopoulos, Othon
Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title_full Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title_fullStr Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title_full_unstemmed Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title_short Human Folliculin Delays Cell Cycle Progression through Late S and G2/M-Phases: Effect of Phosphorylation and Tumor Associated Mutations
title_sort human folliculin delays cell cycle progression through late s and g2/m-phases: effect of phosphorylation and tumor associated mutations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3708955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066775
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