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HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients

Human breast tumors harbor supernumerary centrosomes in almost 80% of tumor cells. Although amplified centrosomes compromise cell viability via multipolar spindles resulting in death-inducing aneuploidy, cancer cells tend to cluster extra centrosomes during mitosis. As a result cancer cells display...

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Autores principales: Pannu, Vaishali, Rida, Padmashree C.G., Ogden, Angela, Turaga, Ravi Chakra, Donthamsetty, Shashikiran, Bowen, Nathan J., Rudd, Katie, Gupta, Meenakshi V., Reid, Michelle D., Cantuaria, Guilherme, Walczak, Claire E., Aneja, Ritu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25788277
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author Pannu, Vaishali
Rida, Padmashree C.G.
Ogden, Angela
Turaga, Ravi Chakra
Donthamsetty, Shashikiran
Bowen, Nathan J.
Rudd, Katie
Gupta, Meenakshi V.
Reid, Michelle D.
Cantuaria, Guilherme
Walczak, Claire E.
Aneja, Ritu
author_facet Pannu, Vaishali
Rida, Padmashree C.G.
Ogden, Angela
Turaga, Ravi Chakra
Donthamsetty, Shashikiran
Bowen, Nathan J.
Rudd, Katie
Gupta, Meenakshi V.
Reid, Michelle D.
Cantuaria, Guilherme
Walczak, Claire E.
Aneja, Ritu
author_sort Pannu, Vaishali
collection PubMed
description Human breast tumors harbor supernumerary centrosomes in almost 80% of tumor cells. Although amplified centrosomes compromise cell viability via multipolar spindles resulting in death-inducing aneuploidy, cancer cells tend to cluster extra centrosomes during mitosis. As a result cancer cells display bipolar spindle phenotypes to maintain a tolerable level of aneuploidy, an edge to their survival. HSET/KifC1, a kinesin-like minus-end directed microtubule motor has recently found fame as a crucial centrosome clustering molecule. Here we show that HSET promotes tumor progression via mechanisms independent of centrosome clustering. We found that HSET is overexpressed in breast carcinomas wherein nuclear HSET accumulation correlated with histological grade and predicted poor progression-free and overall survival. In addition, deregulated HSET protein expression was associated with gene amplification and/or translocation. Our data provide compelling evidence that HSET overexpression is pro-proliferative, promotes clonogenic-survival and enhances cell-cycle kinetics through G2 and M-phases. Importantly, HSET co-immunoprecipitates with survivin, and its overexpression protects survivin from proteasome-mediated degradation, resulting in its increased steady-state levels. We provide the first evidence of centrosome clustering-independent activities of HSET that fuel tumor progression and firmly establish that HSET can serve both as a potential prognostic biomarker and as a valuable cancer-selective therapeutic target.
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spelling pubmed-44674232015-06-22 HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients Pannu, Vaishali Rida, Padmashree C.G. Ogden, Angela Turaga, Ravi Chakra Donthamsetty, Shashikiran Bowen, Nathan J. Rudd, Katie Gupta, Meenakshi V. Reid, Michelle D. Cantuaria, Guilherme Walczak, Claire E. Aneja, Ritu Oncotarget Research Paper Human breast tumors harbor supernumerary centrosomes in almost 80% of tumor cells. Although amplified centrosomes compromise cell viability via multipolar spindles resulting in death-inducing aneuploidy, cancer cells tend to cluster extra centrosomes during mitosis. As a result cancer cells display bipolar spindle phenotypes to maintain a tolerable level of aneuploidy, an edge to their survival. HSET/KifC1, a kinesin-like minus-end directed microtubule motor has recently found fame as a crucial centrosome clustering molecule. Here we show that HSET promotes tumor progression via mechanisms independent of centrosome clustering. We found that HSET is overexpressed in breast carcinomas wherein nuclear HSET accumulation correlated with histological grade and predicted poor progression-free and overall survival. In addition, deregulated HSET protein expression was associated with gene amplification and/or translocation. Our data provide compelling evidence that HSET overexpression is pro-proliferative, promotes clonogenic-survival and enhances cell-cycle kinetics through G2 and M-phases. Importantly, HSET co-immunoprecipitates with survivin, and its overexpression protects survivin from proteasome-mediated degradation, resulting in its increased steady-state levels. We provide the first evidence of centrosome clustering-independent activities of HSET that fuel tumor progression and firmly establish that HSET can serve both as a potential prognostic biomarker and as a valuable cancer-selective therapeutic target. Impact Journals LLC 2015-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4467423/ /pubmed/25788277 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Pannu et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Pannu, Vaishali
Rida, Padmashree C.G.
Ogden, Angela
Turaga, Ravi Chakra
Donthamsetty, Shashikiran
Bowen, Nathan J.
Rudd, Katie
Gupta, Meenakshi V.
Reid, Michelle D.
Cantuaria, Guilherme
Walczak, Claire E.
Aneja, Ritu
HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title_full HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title_fullStr HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title_full_unstemmed HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title_short HSET overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
title_sort hset overexpression fuels tumor progression via centrosome clustering-independent mechanisms in breast cancer patients
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25788277
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