TY - JOUR
T1 - Alternative splicing of the tumor suppressor ASPP2 results in a stress-inducible, oncogenic isoform prevalent in acute leukemia
AU - Schittenhelm, Marcus Matthias
AU - Walter, Bianca
AU - Tsintari, Vasileia
AU - Federmann, Birgit
AU - Bajrami Saipi, Mihada
AU - Akmut, Figen
AU - Illing, Barbara
AU - Mau-Holzmann, Ulrike
AU - Fend, Falko
AU - Lopez, Charles Darin
AU - Kampa-Schittenhelm, Kerstin Maria
N1 - Funding Information:
Grant support from the Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, the IZKF Program of the Medical Faculty Tübingen, the Brigitte Schlieben-Lange Program and the Margarete von Wrangell Program of the State Ministry Baden-Wuerttemberg for Science, Research and Arts and the Athene Program of the excellence initiative of the Eberhard-Karls University, Tübingen. We thank Dr. Sandra Mueller, the cell sorting core facility of the medical faculty Tübingen and Michael Walter at the Microarray Facility at the Institute of Medical Genetics, University Hospital Tübingen for excellent support. The corresponding author had access to all data and had final responsibility to submit for publication.
Funding Information:
Dr. Schittenhelm reports grants from IZKF Program of the Medical Faculty Tübingen, grants from Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, during the conduct of the study; personal fees from Pfizer, personal fees from Astellas, outside the submitted work; In addition, Dr. Schittenhelm has a patent U.S. 13/753,354 issued, a patent PCT/EP 2011/063283 issued, and a patent GER 102010033575.4-41 issued. V. Tsintari has nothing to disclose. B. Walter has nothing to disclose. Dr. Federmann has nothing to disclose. M. Bajrami Saipi has nothing to disclose. Dr. Illing has nothing to disclose. F. Akmut has nothing to disclose. Dr. Mau-Holzmann has nothing to disclose. Dr. Fend has nothing to disclose. Dr. Lopez has nothing to disclose. Dr. Kampa-Schittenhelm reports grants from Brigitte Schlieben-Lange Program Baden-Württemberg, grants from Margarete von Wrangell Program Baden-Wuerttemberg, grants from Athene Program of the University of Tübingen, grants from Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, during the conduct of the study; In addition, Dr. Kampa-Schittenhelm has a patent U.S. 13/753,354 issued, a patent PCT/EP 2011/063283 issued, and a patent GER 102010033575.4-41 issued.
Funding Information:
Grant support from the Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, the IZKF Program of the Medical Faculty Tübingen, the Brigitte Schlieben-Lange Program and the Margarete von Wrangell Program of the State Ministry Baden-Wuerttemberg for Science, Research and Arts and the Athene Program of the excellence initiative of the Eberhard-Karls University, Tübingen.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2019/4
Y1 - 2019/4
N2 - Background: Apoptosis-stimulating Protein of TP53-2 (ASPP2) is a tumor suppressor enhancing TP53-mediated apoptosis via binding to the TP53 core domain. TP53 mutations found in cancers disrupt ASPP2 binding, arguing for an important role of ASPP2 in TP53-mediated tumor suppression. We now identify an oncogenic splicing variant, ASPP2κ, with high prevalence in acute leukemia. Methods: An mRNA screen to detect ASPP2 splicing variants was performed and ASPP2κ was validated using isoform-specific PCR approaches. Translation into a genuine protein isoform was evaluated after establishing epitope-specific antibodies. For functional studies cell models with forced expression of ASPP2κ or isoform-specific ASPP2κ-interference were created to evaluate proliferative, apoptotic and oncogenic characteristics of ASPP2κ. Findings: Exon skipping generates a premature stop codon, leading to a truncated C-terminus, omitting the TP53-binding sites. ASPP2κ translates into a dominant-negative protein variant impairing TP53-dependent induction of apoptosis. ASPP2κ is expressed in CD34+ leukemic progenitor cells and functional studies argue for a role in early oncogenesis, resulting in perturbed proliferation and impaired induction of apoptosis, mitotic failure and chromosomal instability (CIN) – similar to TP53 mutations. Importantly, as expression of ASPP2κ is stress-inducible it defines a novel class of dynamic oncogenes not represented by genomic mutations. Interpretation: Our data demonstrates that ASPP2κ plays a distinctive role as an antiapoptotic regulator of the TP53 checkpoint, rendering cells to a more aggressive phenotype as evidenced by proliferation and apoptosis rates – and ASPP2κ expression results in acquisition of genomic mutations, a first initiating step in leukemogenesis. We provide proof-of-concept to establish ASPP2κ as a clinically relevant biomarker and a target for molecule-defined therapy. Fund: Unrestricted grant support from the Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, the IZKF Program of the Medical Faculty Tübingen, the Brigitte Schlieben-Lange Program and the Margarete von Wrangell Program of the State Ministry Baden-Wuerttemberg for Science, Research and Arts and the Athene Program of the excellence initiative of the Eberhard-Karls University, Tübingen.
AB - Background: Apoptosis-stimulating Protein of TP53-2 (ASPP2) is a tumor suppressor enhancing TP53-mediated apoptosis via binding to the TP53 core domain. TP53 mutations found in cancers disrupt ASPP2 binding, arguing for an important role of ASPP2 in TP53-mediated tumor suppression. We now identify an oncogenic splicing variant, ASPP2κ, with high prevalence in acute leukemia. Methods: An mRNA screen to detect ASPP2 splicing variants was performed and ASPP2κ was validated using isoform-specific PCR approaches. Translation into a genuine protein isoform was evaluated after establishing epitope-specific antibodies. For functional studies cell models with forced expression of ASPP2κ or isoform-specific ASPP2κ-interference were created to evaluate proliferative, apoptotic and oncogenic characteristics of ASPP2κ. Findings: Exon skipping generates a premature stop codon, leading to a truncated C-terminus, omitting the TP53-binding sites. ASPP2κ translates into a dominant-negative protein variant impairing TP53-dependent induction of apoptosis. ASPP2κ is expressed in CD34+ leukemic progenitor cells and functional studies argue for a role in early oncogenesis, resulting in perturbed proliferation and impaired induction of apoptosis, mitotic failure and chromosomal instability (CIN) – similar to TP53 mutations. Importantly, as expression of ASPP2κ is stress-inducible it defines a novel class of dynamic oncogenes not represented by genomic mutations. Interpretation: Our data demonstrates that ASPP2κ plays a distinctive role as an antiapoptotic regulator of the TP53 checkpoint, rendering cells to a more aggressive phenotype as evidenced by proliferation and apoptosis rates – and ASPP2κ expression results in acquisition of genomic mutations, a first initiating step in leukemogenesis. We provide proof-of-concept to establish ASPP2κ as a clinically relevant biomarker and a target for molecule-defined therapy. Fund: Unrestricted grant support from the Wilhelm Sander Foundation for Cancer Research, the IZKF Program of the Medical Faculty Tübingen, the Brigitte Schlieben-Lange Program and the Margarete von Wrangell Program of the State Ministry Baden-Wuerttemberg for Science, Research and Arts and the Athene Program of the excellence initiative of the Eberhard-Karls University, Tübingen.
KW - ASPP2
KW - Acute leukemia
KW - Alternative splicing
KW - Oncogenesis
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.03.028
DO - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.03.028
M3 - Article
C2 - 30952616
AN - SCOPUS:85064587575
SN - 2352-3964
VL - 42
SP - 340
EP - 351
JO - EBioMedicine
JF - EBioMedicine
ER -