Regulation of the error-prone DNA polymerase Polκ by oncogenic signaling and its contribution to drug resistance.

TitleRegulation of the error-prone DNA polymerase Polκ by oncogenic signaling and its contribution to drug resistance.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsTemprine K, Campbell NR, Huang R, Langdon EM, Simon-Vermot T, Mehta K, Clapp A, Chipman M, White RM
JournalSci Signal
Volume13
Issue629
Date Published2020 Apr 28
ISSN1937-9145
Abstract

The DNA polymerase Polκ plays a key role in translesion synthesis, an error-prone replication mechanism. Polκ is overexpressed in various tumor types. Here, we found that melanoma and lung and breast cancer cells experiencing stress from oncogene inhibition up-regulated the expression of Polκ and shifted its localization from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. This effect was phenocopied by inhibition of the kinase mTOR, by induction of ER stress, or by glucose deprivation. In unstressed cells, Polκ is continually transported out of the nucleus by exportin-1. Inhibiting exportin-1 or overexpressing Polκ increased the abundance of nuclear-localized Polκ, particularly in response to the BRAF-targeted inhibitor vemurafenib, which decreased the cytotoxicity of the drug in BRAF melanoma cells. These observations were analogous to how encountering cell stress and nutrient deprivation can up-regulate and activate DinB/pol IV, the bacterial ortholog of Polκ, to induce mutagenesis that enables stress tolerance or escape. However, we found that the increased expression of Polκ was not excessively mutagenic, indicating that noncatalytic or other functions of Polκ could mediate its role in stress responses in mammalian cells. Repressing the expression or nuclear localization of Polκ might prevent drug resistance in some cancer cells.

DOI10.1126/scisignal.aau1453
Alternate JournalSci Signal
PubMed ID32345725

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