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Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts

Inositol Polyphosphate 4-Phosphatase, Type II (INPP4B) is a tumour suppressor in breast, ovarian, prostate, thyroid and other cancers, attributed to its ability to reduce oncogenic Akt-signaling. However, emerging studies show that INPP4B also has tumour-promoting properties in cancers including acu...

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Autores principales: Mangialardi, Emily Marie, Chen, Keyue, Salmon, Brittany, Vacher, Jean, Salmena, Leonardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6824866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31695845
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27293
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author Mangialardi, Emily Marie
Chen, Keyue
Salmon, Brittany
Vacher, Jean
Salmena, Leonardo
author_facet Mangialardi, Emily Marie
Chen, Keyue
Salmon, Brittany
Vacher, Jean
Salmena, Leonardo
author_sort Mangialardi, Emily Marie
collection PubMed
description Inositol Polyphosphate 4-Phosphatase, Type II (INPP4B) is a tumour suppressor in breast, ovarian, prostate, thyroid and other cancers, attributed to its ability to reduce oncogenic Akt-signaling. However, emerging studies show that INPP4B also has tumour-promoting properties in cancers including acute myeloid leukemia, colon cancer, melanoma and breast cancer. Together these findings suggest that INPP4B may be a context dependent cancer gene. Whether INPP4B functions solely in a tumour suppressing or tumour promoting manner, or both in non-transformed cells is currently not clear. In this study, consequences of deficiency and overexpression of INPP4B on cellular transformation was investigated using a mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) model of cellular transformation. We observed that neither deficiency nor overexpression of INPP4B was sufficient to induce neoplastic transformation, alone or in combination with H-Ras(V12) or E1A overexpression. However, Inpp4b-deficiency did cooperate with SV40 T-Large-mediated cellular transformation, a finding which was associated with increased phosphorylated-Akt levels. Transformation and phosphorylated-Akt levels were dampened upon overexpression of INPP4B in SV40 T-Large-MEF. Together, our findings support a model where INPP4B function suppresses transformation mediated by SV40 T-Large, but is inconsequential for Ras and E1A mediated transformation.
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spelling pubmed-68248662019-11-06 Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts Mangialardi, Emily Marie Chen, Keyue Salmon, Brittany Vacher, Jean Salmena, Leonardo Oncotarget Research Paper Inositol Polyphosphate 4-Phosphatase, Type II (INPP4B) is a tumour suppressor in breast, ovarian, prostate, thyroid and other cancers, attributed to its ability to reduce oncogenic Akt-signaling. However, emerging studies show that INPP4B also has tumour-promoting properties in cancers including acute myeloid leukemia, colon cancer, melanoma and breast cancer. Together these findings suggest that INPP4B may be a context dependent cancer gene. Whether INPP4B functions solely in a tumour suppressing or tumour promoting manner, or both in non-transformed cells is currently not clear. In this study, consequences of deficiency and overexpression of INPP4B on cellular transformation was investigated using a mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) model of cellular transformation. We observed that neither deficiency nor overexpression of INPP4B was sufficient to induce neoplastic transformation, alone or in combination with H-Ras(V12) or E1A overexpression. However, Inpp4b-deficiency did cooperate with SV40 T-Large-mediated cellular transformation, a finding which was associated with increased phosphorylated-Akt levels. Transformation and phosphorylated-Akt levels were dampened upon overexpression of INPP4B in SV40 T-Large-MEF. Together, our findings support a model where INPP4B function suppresses transformation mediated by SV40 T-Large, but is inconsequential for Ras and E1A mediated transformation. Impact Journals LLC 2019-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC6824866/ /pubmed/31695845 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27293 Text en Copyright: © 2019 Mangliardi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Mangialardi, Emily Marie
Chen, Keyue
Salmon, Brittany
Vacher, Jean
Salmena, Leonardo
Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title_full Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title_fullStr Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title_short Investigating the duality of Inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
title_sort investigating the duality of inpp4b function in the cellular transformation of mouse fibroblasts
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6824866/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31695845
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27293
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