Abstract

The aminobisphosphonate zoledronic acid has elicited significant attention due to its remarkable anti-tumoral activity, although its detailed mechanism of action remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate the existence of a nuclear GSK-3β-NFATc2 stabilization pathway that promotes breast and pancreatic cancer growth in vitro and in vivo and serves as a bona fide target of zoledronic acid. Specifically, the serine/threonine kinase GSK-3β stabilizes nuclear NFATc2 through phosphorylation of the serine-rich SP2 domain, thus protecting the transcription factor from E3-ubiquitin ligase HDM2-mediated proteolysis. Zoledronic acid disrupts this NFATc2 stabilization pathway through two mechanisms, namely GSK-3β inhibition and induction of HDM2 activity. Upon nuclear accumulation, HDM2 targets unphosphorylated NFATc2 for ubiquitination at acceptor lysine residues Lys-684/Lys-897 and hence labels the factor for subsequent proteasomal degradation. Conversely, mutagenesis-induced constitutive serine phosphorylation (Ser-215, Ser-219, and Ser-223) of the SP2 domain prevents NFATc2 from HDM2-mediated ubiquitination and degradation and consequently rescues cancer cells from growth suppression by zoledronic acid. In conclusion, this study demonstrates a critical role of the GSK-3β-HDM2 signaling loop in the regulation of NFATc2 protein stability and growth promotion and suggests that double targeting of this pathway is responsible, at least to a significant part, for the potent and reliable anti-tumoral effects of zoledronic acid.

Highlights

  • The aminobisphosphonate zoledronic acid has elicited significant attention due to its remarkable anti-tumoral activity, its detailed mechanism of action remains unclear

  • To assess whether tumor growth suppression by zoledronic acid (ZOL) can be recapitulated in vivo, we carried out growth studies in a xenograft tumor model following injection of either IMIM-PC1 pancreatic cancer cells or MDA-MB-435 breast cancer cells into the flanks of athymic nude mice

  • The present study reports, for the first time, a novel mechanism mediating the anti-tumoral effect of zoledronic acid

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Summary

Introduction

The aminobisphosphonate zoledronic acid has elicited significant attention due to its remarkable anti-tumoral activity, its detailed mechanism of action remains unclear. This study demonstrates a critical role of the GSK-3␤-HDM2 signaling loop in the regulation of NFATc2 protein stability and growth promotion and suggests that double targeting of this pathway is responsible, at least to a significant part, for the potent and reliable anti-tumoral effects of zoledronic acid.

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