Abstract
Current therapeutic strategies against Wilms' tumor (WT) reach 80% to 85% success rate. In spite of this, a remaining 15% to 20% of tumors relapse and are associated with increased metastasis and poor prognosis. To identify new regulators of WT progression, we screened for developmental target genes of Pax2, a key regulator of kidney development and a WT signature gene. We show that one of these target genes, calcineurin A-binding protein (CnABP), is coexpressed with Pax2 during kidney development and is overexpressed in >70% of WT samples analyzed. The CnABP gene encodes a novel protein product conserved in higher vertebrates. We show that CnABP promotes cell proliferation and migration in cell culture experiments. Biochemical analyses additionally identified an interaction between CnABP and calcineurin Abeta, the catalytic subunit of the calcium-responsive serine/threonine phosphatase calcineurin. We show that this interaction leads to the inhibition of calcineurin phosphatase activity and prevents nuclear factor of activated T-cell (NFAT) nuclear translocation. Inhibition of NFAT nuclear localization results in decreased NFAT transcriptional response. Together, these data identify a new modulator of calcineurin signaling up-regulated in WTs.
Highlights
Wilms' tumors (WT) represent ∼85% of childhood kidney cancer
We show that calcineurin A–binding protein (CnABP) binds and inhibits calcineurin Aβ, a central component of the calcium signaling pathway identified as a signature pathway of recurrent WTs
Identification of CnABP In an effort to find new regulators of kidney development and tumorigenesis, we did a series of microarray experiments comparing (a) wild-type with Pax2 mutant renal cells, (b) early with later stages of mouse mesonephros development, and (c) Pax2-expressing renal cells with surrounding Pax2-negative tissues [36, 37]
Summary
Wilms' tumors (WT) represent ∼85% of childhood kidney cancer. It is believed to arise from nephrogenic rests resulting from a failure of mesenchymal progenitor cells to differentiate into nephrons. Relapse has been linked to consistent deregulation of a limited number of genes, including components of the calcineurin signaling pathway [9]
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