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Download fileFunctional Proteomics Study Reveals SUMOylation of TFII‑I is Involved in Liver Cancer Cell Proliferation
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posted on 2015-06-05, 00:00 authored by Jun Tu, Yalan Chen, Lili Cai, Changming Xu, Yang Zhang, Yanmei Chen, Chen Zhang, Jian Zhao, Jinke Cheng, Hongwei Xie, Fan Zhong, Fuchu HeSUMOylation
has emerged as a new regulatory mechanism for proteins
involved in multiple physiological and pathological processes. However,
the detailed function of SUMOylation in liver cancer is still elusive.
This study reveals that the SUMOylation-activating enzyme UBA2 is
highly expressed in liver cancer cells and clinical samples. Silencing
of UBA2 expression could to some extent suppress cell proliferation.
To elucidate the function of UBA2, we used a large scale proteomics
strategy to identify SUMOylation targets in HepG2 cells. We characterized
827 potential SUMO1-modified proteins that were not present in the
control samples. These proteins were enriched in gene expression processes.
Twelve candidates were validated as SUMO1-modified proteins by immunoprecipitation-Western
blotting. We further characterized SUMOylated protein TFII-I that
was identified in this study and determined that TFII-I was modified
by SUMO1 at K221 and K240. PIAS4 was an E3 ligase for TFII-I SUMOylation,
and SENP2 was responsible for deSUMOylating TFII-I in HepG2 cells.
SUMOylation reduced TFII-I binding to its repressor HDAC3 and thus
promoted its transcriptional activity. We further show that SUMOylation
is critical for TFII-I to promote cell proliferation and colony formation.
Our findings contribute to understanding the role of SUMOylation in
liver cancer development.