Abstract

The PPP2R2A gene encodes the B55α regulatory subunit of PP2A. Here, we report that PPP2R2A is hemizygously lost in ~42% of prostate adenocarcinomas, correlating with reduced expression, poorer prognosis, and an increased incidence of hemizygous loss (>75%) in metastatic disease. Of note, PPP2R2A homozygous loss is less common (5%) and not increased at later tumor stages. Reduced expression of B55α is also seen in prostate tumor tissue and cell lines. Consistent with the possibility that complete loss of PPP2R2A is detrimental in prostate tumors, PPP2R2A deletion in cells with reduced but present B55α reduces cell proliferation by slowing progression through the cell cycle. Remarkably, B55α-low cells also appear addicted to lower B55α expression, as even moderate increases in B55α expression are toxic. Reconstitution of B55α expression in prostate cancer (PCa) cell lines with low B55α expression reduces proliferation, inhibits transformation and blocks xenograft tumorigenicity. Mechanistically, we show B55α reconstitution reduces phosphorylation of proteins essential for centrosomal maintenance, and induces centrosome collapse and chromosome segregation failure; a first reported link between B55α/PP2A and the vertebrate centrosome. These effects are dependent on a prolonged metaphase/anaphase checkpoint and are lethal to PCa cells addicted to low levels of B55α. Thus, we propose the reduction in B55α levels associated with hemizygous loss is necessary for centrosomal integrity in PCa cells, leading to selective lethality of B55α reconstitution. Such a vulnerability could be targeted therapeutically in the large pool of patients with hemizygous PPP2R2A deletions, using pharmacologic approaches that enhance PP2A/B55α activity.

Highlights

  • Introduction Protein phosphatase2A (PP2A) exhibits tumor suppressor function[1]

  • PPP2R2A is hemizygously deleted in prostate cancer (PCa) and its loss is associated with poorer prognosis

  • Analysis of 492 prostate tumor genomes from the TCGA dataset (Fig. 1a) indicated that hemizygous loss of PPP2R2A occurred in ~42% (206/492) of prostate adenocarcinomas

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction Protein phosphatase2A (PP2A) exhibits tumor suppressor function[1]. Given that PP2A holoenzyme functions as a trimer, with activity and specificity modulated by myriad of positive regulatory subunits and inhibitoryThe PP2A holoenzyme consists of a B regulatory subunit, associated with a core heterodimer composed of a catalytic (C) and a scaffold (A) subunit. 2A (PP2A) exhibits tumor suppressor function[1]. Given that PP2A holoenzyme functions as a trimer, with activity and specificity modulated by myriad of positive regulatory subunits and inhibitory. The PP2A holoenzyme consists of a B regulatory subunit, associated with a core heterodimer composed of a catalytic (C) and a scaffold (A) subunit. Zhao et al Oncogenesis (2019)8:72 substrate specificity and regulatory, subcellular and cell type-dependent functionality[4,5]. Given multiple B regulatory subunits, and because the scaffold and catalytic subunits are each encoded by two genes, close to sixty distinct trimeric PP2A holoenzymes could assemble in cells[5]. There is growing evidence that inactivation of PP2A tumor suppressor activity could be mediated via alteration of B-regulatory subunits[2,5]. Which of the many B regulatory subunits act as tumor suppressors is not well understood

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