Abstract

SUMO-specific proteases (SENPs) play pivotal roles in maintaining the balance of SUMOylation/de-SUMOylation and in SUMO recycling. Deregulation of SENPs leads to cellular dysfunction and corresponding diseases. As a key member of the SENP family, SENP1 is highly correlated with various cancers. However, the potential role of SENP1 in leukemia, especially in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), is not clear. This study shows that ALL cells knocking down SENP1 display compromised growth rather than significant alterations in chemosensitivity, although ALL relapse samples have a relatively higher expression of SENP1 than the paired diagnosis samples. Camptothecin derivatives 7-ethylcamptothecin (7E-CPT, a monomer compound) and topotecan (TPT, an approved clinical drug) induce specific SENP1 reduction and severe apoptosis of ALL cells, showing strong anticancer effects against ALL. Conversely, SENP1 could attenuate this inhibitory effect by targeting DNA topoisomerase I (TOP1) for de-SUMOylation, indicating that specific reduction in SENP1 induced by 7E-CPT and/or topotecan inhibits the proliferation of ALL cells.

Full Text
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