ENY2 transcription and export complex 2 subunit deficiency induces nucleolar stress to inhibit tumor progression through NPM1/MDM2/p53-dependent and -independent responses.

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The selective induction of nucleolar stress in cancer cells has become a potential anticancer therapy. However, precisely regulating the key molecules involved in nucleolar stress remains a challenging topic in current research. ENY2 transcription and export complex 2 subunit (ENY2) is a transcription-associated nuclear protein that is upregulated in several cancers. However, its specific function and mechanistic role in oncogenesis remain poorly characterized and require further exploration. ENY2 was identified by screening ChIP-seq and public databases. Its role in tumor development was confirmed through in vivo and in vitro experiments. RNA sequencing, polysome profiling, agarose gel electrophoresis, and immunofluorescence suggested ENY2's involvement in ribosome biogenesis. Interacting proteins were identified by confocal microscopy, co-IP, and molecular docking, then validated by western blotting and ubiquitination assays. Finally, drug resistance experiments evaluated ENY2's clinical potential. We discovered that the overexpression of ENY2 significantly enhances tumor growth and cell cycle progression both in vitro and in vivo. Conversely, depletion of ENY2 facilitating the release of NPM1 into the nucleoplasm, thereby impeding ribosomal subunit export and inducing nucleolar stress. Additionally, the released NPM1 interacts with MDM2 within the nucleus to stabilize p53 protein levels, consequently inhibiting tumor growth. Notably, knockdown of ENY2 in p53-mutant cancer cell lines exhibits an augmented binding affinity and silencing efficacy of RISC towards target mRNA molecules, ultimately suppressing tumor proliferation through a p53-independent manner. This study elucidated a previously unrecognized role of ENY2 in tumor growth, clarified the NPM1/MDM2/ p53-dependent mechanism of ENY2-mediated tumor cell growth suppression. We also provided a novel p53-independent RISC-IL11 nucleolar stress response pathway, which may provide a new target for the treatment of breast cancer.

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  • 10.4161/nucl.32235
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  • Nucleus
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A veritable explosion of primary research papers within the past 10 years focuses on nucleolar and ribosomal stress, and for good reason: with ribosome biosynthesis consuming ~80% of a cell’s energy, nearly all metabolic and signaling pathways lead ultimately to or from the nucleolus. We begin by describing p53 activation upon nucleolar stress resulting in cell cycle arrest or apoptosis. The significance of this mechanism cannot be understated, as oncologists are now inducing nucleolar stress strategically in cancer cells as a potential anti-cancer therapy. We also summarize the human ribosomopathies, syndromes in which ribosome biogenesis or function are impaired leading to birth defects or bone narrow failures; the perplexing problem in the ribosomopathies is why only certain cells are affected despite the fact that the causative mutation is systemic. We then describe p53-independent nucleolar stress, first in yeast which lacks p53, and then in other model metazoans that lack MDM2, the critical E3 ubiquitin ligase that normally inactivates p53. Do these presumably ancient p53-independent nucleolar stress pathways remain latent in human cells? If they still exist, can we use them to target >50% of known human cancers that lack functional p53?

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  • Cite Count Icon 114
  • 10.1074/jbc.m801387200
Mycophenolic Acid Activation of p53 Requires Ribosomal Proteins L5 and L11
  • May 1, 2008
  • The Journal of biological chemistry
  • Xiao-Xin Sun + 2 more

Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), a prodrug of mycophenolic acid (MPA), is widely used as an immunosuppressive agent. MPA selectively inhibits inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH), a rate-limiting enzyme for the de novo synthesis of guanine nucleotides, leading to depletion of the guanine nucleotide pool. Its chemotherapeutic effects have been attributed to its ability to induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. MPA treatment has also been shown to induce and activate p53. However, the mechanism underlying the p53 activation pathway is still unclear. Here, we show that MPA treatment results in inhibition of pre-rRNA synthesis and disruption of the nucleolus. This treatment enhances the interaction of MDM2 with L5 and L11. Interestingly, knockdown of endogenous L5 or L11 markedly impairs the induction of p53 and G(1) cell cycle arrest induced by MPA. These results suggest that MPA may trigger a nucleolar stress that induces p53 activation via inhibition of MDM2 by ribosomal proteins L5 and L11.

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Yeast Models of Diamond Blackfan Anemia and Shwachman Diamond Syndrome Differ in Their Effect on the Synthesis and Function of Ribosomal Subunits.
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Yeast Models of Diamond Blackfan Anemia and Shwachman Diamond Syndrome Differ in Their Effect on the Synthesis and Function of Ribosomal Subunits.

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  • 10.5511/plantbiotechnology.22.1215a
Upstream open reading frame-mediated upregulation of ANAC082 expression in response to nucleolar stress in Arabidopsis
  • Mar 25, 2023
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  • Shun Sasaki + 13 more

Perturbations in ribosome biogenesis cause a type of cellular stress called nucleolar or ribosomal stress, which triggers adaptive responses in both animal and plant cells. The Arabidopsis ANAC082 transcription factor has been identified as a key mediator of the plant nucleolar stress response. The 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR) of ANAC082 mRNA contains an upstream ORF (uORF) encoding an evolutionarily conserved amino acid sequence. Here, we report that this uORF mediates the upregulation of ANAC082 expression in response to nucleolar stress. When transgenic Arabidopsis plants containing a luciferase reporter gene under the control of the ANAC082 promoter and 5'-UTR were treated with reagents that induced nucleolar stress, expression of the reporter gene was enhanced in a uORF sequence-dependent manner. Additionally, we examined the effect of an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-inducing reagent on reporter gene expression because the closest homolog of ANAC082 in Arabidopsis, ANAC103, is involved in the ER stress response. However, the ANAC082 uORF did not respond to ER stress. Interestingly, although ANAC103 has a uORF with an amino acid sequence similar to that of the ANAC082 uORF, the C-terminal sequence critical for regulation is not well conserved among ANAC103 homologs in Brassicaceae. Transient expression assays revealed that unlike the ANAC082 uORF, the ANAC103 uORF does not exert a sequence-dependent repressive effect. Altogether, our findings suggest that the ANAC082 uORF is important for the nucleolar stress response but not for the ER stress response, and that for this reason, the uORF sequence-dependent regulation was lost in ANAC103 during evolution.

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Alcohol Exposure Induces Nucleolar Stress and Apoptosis in Mouse Neural Stem Cells and Late-Term Fetal Brain
  • Mar 2, 2024
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Glioblastoma (GBM), an extremely aggressive brain tumor, presents molecular complexities that require enormous challenges for its better understanding. The relatively unexplored dual-specificity phosphatase 12 (DUSP12) is an attractive target due to its zinc finger-like domain suggesting potential interactions with nucleic acids and ribonucleoproteins. This highly conserved enzyme plays a pivotal role in ribosome biogenesis across eukaryotes. Importantly, cell cycle arrest induced by DNA damage often coincides with alterations in ribosome biogenesis, a phenomenon termed nucleolar stress, linked to changes in the localization and activity of nucleophosmin (NPM) and p53 proteins. Bioinformatic analysis of public databases revealed elevated DUSP12 expression in glioblastoma samples compared to normal tissue, displaying strong positive correlations with p53 and NPM. While DUSP12 expression did not impact tumor progression in wild-type p53 patients, its lower expression was associated with increased tumor progression in p53-mutant cases, emphasizing the significance of p53 status in understanding DUSP12's roles in GBM. Gene ontology analysis of DUSP12-correlated genes in glioblastoma patients showed robust enrichment in biological processes like ribosome biogenesis, chromosome organization, cell cycle, and DNA repair, with a substantial number of nucleoplasmic and nucleolar proteins being recently identified by our group through mass spectrometry as DUSP12 partners in other tumor models. A substantial difference in DUSP12 protein levels between the GBM cell lines U87MG (wild-type p53) and U138MG (mutant p53) was observed, with the latter presenting higher levels of this phosphatase. Some biological responses of these cell lines were assessed after exposure to the topoisomerase inhibitors doxorubicin (DX) and camptothecin (CPT) through viability assays in adherent and spheroid cultures, γH2AX foci formation, and ATM/Chk2 activation, showing marginal differences between the cell lines. Notably, DX treatment displayed strong nucleolar stress features, such as alterations in the number and size of nucleoli observed by NPM subcellular distribution changes in both cell lines, and induction of p21 expression only in the p53-profficient U87MG. These alterations were accompanied by nuclear accumulation of DUSP12, underlining its potential regulatory role in this process. The knockdown of DUSP12 with specific siRNA led to a substantial decrease of the treatment responsiveness in U138MG, consistent with the lower levels of this phosphatase associated with a more aggressive phenotype in mutant p53 patients. In summary, DUSP12 emerges as a pivotal player in glioblastoma, influencing nucleolar stress dynamics and tumor aggressiveness, particularly in the context of p53 mutations. Citation Format: Viktor Kalbermatter Boell, Fábio Luís Forti. DUSP12 in glioblastoma: Insights into nucleolar stress and DNA damage response [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 381.

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  • Cite Count Icon 33
  • 10.1111/cas.15755
Nucleolar stress: Molecular mechanisms and related human diseases.
  • Feb 28, 2023
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  • Tomohiko Maehama + 4 more

Ribosome biogenesis in the nucleolus is an important process that consumes 80% of a cell's intracellular energy supply. Disruption of this process results in nucleolar stress, triggering the activation of molecular systems that respond to this stress to maintain homeostasis. Although nucleolar stress was originally thought to be caused solely by abnormalities of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and ribosomal proteins (RPs), an accumulating body of more current evidence suggests that many other factors, including the DNA damage response and oncogenic stress, are also involved in nucleolar stress response signaling. Cells reacting to nucleolar stress undergo cell cycle arrest or programmed death, mainly driven by activation of the tumor suppressor p53. This observation has nominated nucleolar stress as a promising target for cancer therapy. However, paradoxically, some RP mutations have also been implicated in cancer initiation and progression, necessitating caution. In this article, we summarize recent findings on the molecular mechanisms of nucleolar stress and the human ribosomal diseases and cancers that arise in its wake.

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  • Supplementary Content
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.3390/cells12162071
An Update on Nucleolar Stress: The Transcriptional Control of Autophagy
  • Aug 15, 2023
  • Cells
  • Astrid S Pfister

Nucleolar stress reflects a misfunction of the nucleolus caused by a failure in ribosome biogenesis and defective nucleolar architecture. Various causes have been reported, most commonly mutation of ribosomal proteins and ribosome processing factors, as well as interference with these processes by intracellular or ectopic stress, such as RNA polymerase I inhibition, ROS, UV and others. The nucleolus represents the place for ribosome biogenesis and serves as a crucial hub in the cellular stress response. It has been shown to stimulate multiple downstream consequences, interfering with cell growth and survival. Nucleolar stress induction is most classically known to stimulate p53-dependent cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Nucleolar stress represents a friend and enemy at the same time: From a pathophysiological perspective, inactivation of the nucleolar function by mutation or stress conditions is connected to multiple diseases, such as neurodegeneration, cancer and ribosomopathy syndromes. However, triggering the nucleolar stress response via specific chemotherapeutics, which interfere with nucleolar function, has beneficial effects for anti-cancer therapy. Interestingly, since the nucleolar stress response also triggers p53-independent mechanisms, it possesses the potential to specifically target p53-mutated tumors, which reflects the most common aberration in human cancer. More recent data have shown that the nucleolar stress response can activate autophagy and diverse signaling cascades that might allow initial pro-survival mechanisms. Nevertheless, it depends on the situation whether the cells undergo autophagy-mediated apoptosis or survive, as seen for autophagy-dependent drug resistance of chemotherapy-exposed tumor cells. Given the relatively young age of the research field, precise mechanisms that underly the involvement of autophagy in nucleolar stress are still under investigation. This review gives an update on the emerging contribution of nucleolar stress in the regulation of autophagy at a transcriptional level. It also appears that in autophagy p53-dependent as well as -independent responses are induced. Those could be exploited in future therapies against diseases connected to nucleolar stress.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.3390/cancers13246220
Nucleolar Stress Functions Upstream to Stimulate Expression of Autophagy Regulators
  • Dec 10, 2021
  • Cancers
  • David P Dannheisig + 3 more

Simple SummaryRibosome biogenesis takes place in nucleoli and is essential for cellular survival and proliferation. In case this function is disturbed, either due to defects in regulatory factors or the structure of the nucleolus, nucleolar stress is provoked. Consequently, cells classically undergo cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Induction of nucleolar stress is known to eliminate cells in the background of cancer therapy and paradoxically is also associated with increased cancer formation. Recent reports demonstrated that nucleolar stress triggers autophagy, a conserved pathway responsible for recycling endogenous material. Thus, it was suggested that autophagy might serve as compensatory pro-survival response. However, the mechanisms how nucleolar stress triggers autophagy are poorly understood. Here we show that induction of nucleolar stress by depleting ribosome biogenesis factors or by interfering with RNA polymerase I function, triggers expression of various key autophagy regulators. Moreover, we demonstrate that RNA pol I inhibition by CX-5461 correlates with increased ATG7 and ATGL16L1 levels, essential factors for generating autophagosomes, and stimulates autophagic flux.Ribosome biogenesis is essential for protein synthesis, cell growth and survival. The process takes places in nucleoli and is orchestrated by various proteins, among them RNA polymerases I–III as well as ribosome biogenesis factors. Perturbation of ribosome biogenesis activates the nucleolar stress response, which classically triggers cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Nucleolar stress is utilized in modern anti-cancer therapies, however, also contributes to the development of various pathologies, including cancer. Growing evidence suggests that nucleolar stress stimulates compensatory cascades, for instance bulk autophagy. However, underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that induction of nucleolar stress activates expression of key autophagic regulators such as ATG7 and ATG16L1, essential for generation of autophagosomes. We show that knockdown of the ribosomopathy factor SBDS, or of key ribosome biogenesis factors (PPAN, NPM, PES1) is associated with enhanced levels of ATG7 in cancer cells. The same holds true when interfering with RNA polymerase I function by either pharmacological inhibition (CX-5461) or depletion of the transcription factor UBF-1. Moreover, we demonstrate that RNA pol I inhibition by CX-5461 stimulates autophagic flux. Together, our data establish that nucleolar stress affects transcriptional regulation of autophagy. Given the contribution of both axes in propagation or cure of cancer, our data uncover a connection that might be targeted in future.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 4
  • 10.1371/journal.pone.0304557
Alcohol exposure suppresses ribosome biogenesis and causes nucleolar stress in cranial neural crest cells.
  • Jun 28, 2024
  • PloS one
  • George R Flentke + 4 more

Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) causes cognitive impairment and a distinctive craniofacial dysmorphology, due in part to apoptotic losses of the pluripotent cranial neural crest cells (CNCs) that form facial bones and cartilage. We previously reported that PAE rapidly represses expression of >70 ribosomal proteins (padj = 10-E47). Ribosome dysbiogenesis causes nucleolar stress and activates p53-MDM2-mediated apoptosis. Using primary avian CNCs and the murine CNC line O9-1, we tested whether nucleolar stress and p53-MDM2 signaling mediates this apoptosis. We further tested whether haploinsufficiency in genes that govern ribosome biogenesis, using a blocking morpholino approach, synergizes with alcohol to worsen craniofacial outcomes in a zebrafish model. In both avian and murine CNCs, pharmacologically relevant alcohol exposure (20mM, 2hr) causes the dissolution of nucleolar structures and the loss of rRNA synthesis; this nucleolar stress persisted for 18-24hr. This was followed by reduced proliferation, stabilization of nuclear p53, and apoptosis that was prevented by overexpression of MDM2 or dominant-negative p53. In zebrafish embryos, low-dose alcohol or morpholinos directed against ribosomal proteins Rpl5a, Rpl11, and Rps3a, the Tcof homolog Nolc1, or mdm2 separately caused modest craniofacial malformations, whereas these blocking morpholinos synergized with low-dose alcohol to reduce and even eliminate facial elements. Similar results were obtained using a small molecule inhibitor of RNA Polymerase 1, CX5461, whereas p53-blocking morpholinos normalized craniofacial outcomes under high-dose alcohol. Transcriptome analysis affirmed that alcohol suppressed the expression of >150 genes essential for ribosome biogenesis. We conclude that alcohol causes the apoptosis of CNCs, at least in part, by suppressing ribosome biogenesis and invoking a nucleolar stress that initiates their p53-MDM2 mediated apoptosis. We further note that the facial deficits that typify PAE and some ribosomopathies share features including reduced philtrum, upper lip, and epicanthal distance, suggesting the facial deficits of PAE represent, in part, a ribosomopathy.

  • Supplementary Content
  • Cite Count Icon 48
  • 10.3390/cells11193017
Nucleolus and Nucleolar Stress: From Cell Fate Decision to Disease Development
  • Sep 27, 2022
  • Cells
  • Lu Hua + 3 more

Besides the canonical function in ribosome biogenesis, there have been significant recent advances towards the fascinating roles of the nucleolus in stress response, cell destiny decision and disease progression. Nucleolar stress, an emerging concept describing aberrant nucleolar structure and function as a result of impaired rRNA synthesis and ribosome biogenesis under stress conditions, has been linked to a variety of signaling transductions, including but not limited to Mdm2-p53, NF-κB and HIF-1α pathways. Studies have uncovered that nucleolus is a stress sensor and signaling hub when cells encounter various stress conditions, such as nutrient deprivation, DNA damage and oxidative and thermal stress. Consequently, nucleolar stress plays a pivotal role in the determination of cell fate, such as apoptosis, senescence, autophagy and differentiation, in response to stress-induced damage. Nucleolar homeostasis has been involved in the pathogenesis of various chronic diseases, particularly tumorigenesis, neurodegenerative diseases and metabolic disorders. Mechanistic insights have revealed the indispensable role of nucleolus-initiated signaling in the progression of these diseases. Accordingly, the intervention of nucleolar stress may pave the path for developing novel therapies against these diseases. In this review, we systemically summarize recent findings linking the nucleolus to stress responses, signaling transduction and cell-fate decision, set the spotlight on the mechanisms by which nucleolar stress drives disease progression, and highlight the merit of the intervening nucleolus in disease treatment.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 16
  • 10.4161/cc.28605
ATM-dependent E2F1 accumulation in the nucleolus is an indicator of ribosomal stress in early response to DNA damage
  • Mar 25, 2014
  • Cell Cycle
  • Ya-Qiong Jin + 4 more

The nucleolus plays a major role in ribosome biogenesis. Most genotoxic agents disrupt nucleolar structure and function, which results in the stabilization/activation of p53, inducing cell cycle arrest or apoptosis. Likewise, transcription factor E2F1 as a DNA damage responsive protein also plays roles in cell cycle arrest, DNA repair, or apoptosis in response to DNA damage through transcriptional response and protein–protein interaction. Furthermore, E2F1 is known to be involved in regulating rRNA transcription. However, how E2F1 displays in coordinating DNA damage and nucleolar stress is unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that ATM-dependent E2F1 accumulation in the nucleolus is a characteristic feature of nucleolar stress in early response to DNA damage. We found that at the early stage of DNA damage, E2F1 accumulation in the nucleolus was an ATM-dependent and a common event in p53-suficient and -deficient cells. Increased nucleolar E2F1 was sequestered by the nucleolar protein p14ARF, which repressed E2F1-dependent rRNA transcription initiation, and was coupled with S phase. Our data indicate that early accumulation of E2F1 in the nucleolus is an indicator for nucleolar stress and a component of ATM pathway, which presumably buffers elevation of E2F1 in the nucleoplasm and coordinates the diversifying mechanisms of E2F1 acts in cell cycle progression and apoptosis in early response to DNA damage.

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