KIAA1524

KIAA1524
Identifiers
AliasesKIAA1524, C330027C09Rik, AA408511, AU018569, Cip2a, Kiaa1524, p90, cell proliferation regulating inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A
External IDsMGI: 2146335 HomoloGene: 10842 GeneCards: KIAA1524
RNA expression pattern




More reference expression data
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez

57650

224171

Ensembl

ENSG00000163507

ENSMUSG00000033031

UniProt

Q8TCG1

Q8BWY9

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_020890

NM_172616

RefSeq (protein)

NP_065941

NP_766204

Location (UCSC)Chr 3: 108.55 – 108.59 MbChr 16: 48.99 – 49.02 Mb
PubMed search[1][2]
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse

Protein CIP2A also known as cancerous inhibitor of PP2A (CIP2A) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the KIAA1524 gene.[3][4]

Function

Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is a trimeric serine-threonine phosphatase consisting of a catalytic C-subunit (PP2Ac), a scaffolding A-subunit and various regulatory B-subunits. Importantly, it has been estimated that collectively PP2A complexes can dephosphorylate a vast majority of all cellular serine/threonine phosphorylated proteins including large number of phosphoproteins involved in cancer maintenance and progression. The functional role of PP2A as a human tumor suppressor was validated by studies initiated by the Weinberg laboratory, which demonstrated that normal human cells immortalized by overexpression of TERT and inhibition of p53 and Rb, could not be transformed by oncogenic forms of H-Ras without simultaneous inhibition of PP2A activity. These studies established the paradigm that increased activity of oncogenic kinases is not sufficient to drive human cell transformation if PP2A activity is not simultaneously inhibited. In striking contrast to the tumor suppressor p53, which in human tumors is mainly inactivated by mutations, PP2A complex proteins are mutated at low frequency (http://www.cbioportal.org) and rather seem to be inhibited by overexpression of PP2A inhibitor proteins such as CIP2A, PME-1 and SET.

CIP2A inhibits PP2A tumor suppressor activity in human malignancies.[5] More specifically, CIP2A was demonstrated to inhibit PP2A activity towards oncogenic transcription factor c-Myc, and thereby prevent c-Myc proteolytic degradation. Moreover, CIP2A is required for the malignant cellular growth and for in vivo tumor formation. In accordance with the oncogenic role of CIP2A, overexpression of CIP2A promotes Ras-elicited cell growth and transforms immortalized human cells (HEK-TERVs). More recently CIP2A has been shown to regulate phosphorylation and activity of many other oncoproteins and to drive malignant cell growth and tumorigenesis in various human cancer types. Importantly, CIP2A deficient mice are viable, suggesting that targeting of oncogenic function of CIP2A would not results in serious side-effects.

Clinical significance

CIP2A is over-expressed in several common human malignancies including, human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), colon cancer, gastric cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer and lung cancer. Notably, in these cancer types CIP2A over-expression is observed with very high frequency; in breast cancer around 40% of cancer patients are over-expressing CIP2A whereas in all other studied cancer types the frequency is between 65-87 percent. In breast cancer CIP2A expression correlates with disease aggressivity whereas in gastric and lung cancer CIP2A expression predicts for poor patient survival.[6][7] To date high CIP2A expression has been observed to predict poor patient prognosis in more than dozen human cancer types, which makes it one of the most frequently altered human oncoprotein with clinical relevance.

CIP2A is also over expressed in prostate cancer,[8] lung cancer,[9] oral squamous cell carcinoma,[10] and gastric cancer.[6] Furthermore, the expression of CIP2A correlates with breast cancer aggressivity.[11] It is also implicated in some Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) resistance to imatinib (Gleevec).

References

  1. "Human PubMed Reference:".
  2. "Mouse PubMed Reference:".
  3. Nagase T, Kikuno R, Ishikawa K, Hirosawa M, Ohara O (Sep 2000). "Prediction of the coding sequences of unidentified human genes. XVII. The complete sequences of 100 new cDNA clones from brain which code for large proteins in vitro". DNA Res. 7 (2): 143–50. PMID 10819331. doi:10.1093/dnares/7.2.143.
  4. "Entrez Gene: KIAA1524 KIAA1524".
  5. Junttila MR, Puustinen P, Niemelä M, et al. (2007). "CIP2A inhibits PP2A in human malignancies". Cell. 130 (1): 51–62. PMID 17632056. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2007.04.044.
  6. 1 2 Khanna A, Böckelman C, Hemmes A, Junttila MR, Wiksten JP, Lundin M, Junnila S, Murphy DJ, Evan GI, Haglund C, Westermarck J, Ristimäki A (June 2009). "MYC-dependent regulation and prognostic role of CIP2A in gastric cancer". J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 101 (11): 793–805. PMID 19470954. doi:10.1093/jnci/djp103.
  7. Soo Hoo L, Zhang JY, Chan EK (2002). "Cloning and characterization of a novel 90 kDa 'companion' auto-antigen of p62 over-expressed in cancer". Oncogene. 21 (32): 5006–15. PMID 12118381. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1205625.
  8. Vaarala MH, Väisänen MR, Ristimäki A (2010). "CIP2A expression is increased in prostate cancer". J. Exp. Clin. Cancer Res. 29 (1): 136. PMC 2984408Freely accessible. PMID 20964854. doi:10.1186/1756-9966-29-136.
  9. Dong QZ, Wang Y, Dong XJ, Li ZX, Tang ZP, Cui QZ, Wang EH (September 2010). "CIP2A is Overexpressed in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer and Correlates with Poor Prognosis". Ann Surg Oncol. 18 (3): 857–865. PMID 20842459. doi:10.1245/s10434-010-1313-8.
  10. Basile JR, Czerninski R (November 2010). "The role of CIP2A in oral squamous cell carcinoma". Cancer Biol. Ther. 10 (7): 700–2. PMID 20729627. doi:10.4161/cbt.10.7.13151.
  11. Côme C, Laine A, Chanrion M, Edgren H, Mattila E, Liu X, Jonkers J, Ivaska J, Isola J, Darbon JM, Kallioniemi O, Thézenas S, Westermarck J (August 2009). "CIP2A is associated with human breast cancer aggressivity". Clin. Cancer Res. 15 (16): 5092–100. PMID 19671842. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-3283.

Further reading

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