Abstract

Most colon cancer cases are initiated by truncating mutations in the tumor suppressor, adenomatous polyposis coli (APC). APC is a critical negative regulator of the Wnt signaling pathway that participates in a multi-protein "destruction complex" to target the key effector protein β-catenin for ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis. Prior work has established that the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) enzyme Tankyrase (TNKS) antagonizes destruction complex activity by promoting degradation of the scaffold protein Axin, and recent work suggests that TNKS inhibition is a promising cancer therapy. We performed a yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) screen and uncovered TNKS as a putative binding partner of Drosophila APC2, suggesting that TNKS may play multiple roles in destruction complex regulation. We find that TNKS binds a C-terminal RPQPSG motif in Drosophila APC2, and that this motif is conserved in human APC2, but not human APC1. In addition, we find that APC2 can recruit TNKS into the β-catenin destruction complex, placing the APC2/TNKS interaction at the correct intracellular location to regulate β-catenin proteolysis. We further show that TNKS directly PARylates both Drosophila Axin and APC2, but that PARylation does not globally regulate APC2 protein levels as it does for Axin. Moreover, TNKS inhibition in colon cancer cells decreases β-catenin signaling, which we find cannot be explained solely through Axin stabilization. Instead, our findings suggest that TNKS regulates destruction complex activity at the level of both Axin and APC2, providing further mechanistic insight into TNKS inhibition as a potential Wnt pathway cancer therapy.

Highlights

  • Protein “destruction complex” that promotes proteolysis of the transcriptional co-activator ␤-catenin (␤cat)3 by stimulating phosphorylation of the ␤cat phosphodegron [3]

  • The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has proven to be an excellent model system to study adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) biology. Both flies and humans have two related APC proteins that share a number of core features including a set of N-terminal Armadillo repeats, 15 amino acid repeats (15Rs) and 20 amino acid repeats (20Rs) that both bind ␤cat, and a series of SAMP repeats that bind Axin (Fig. 1A)

  • We and others have focused on Drosophila APC2 as a model to investigate conserved features of how APC proteins contribute to destruction complex function (20 –23)

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Summary

Introduction

Protein “destruction complex” that promotes proteolysis of the transcriptional co-activator ␤-catenin (␤cat)3 by stimulating phosphorylation of the ␤cat phosphodegron [3]. The Tankyrase Binding Domain Is Not Required for APC2 to Rescue ␤-Catenin Destruction in Transfected SW480 Cells—To investigate the importance of the APC2/TNKS interaction in regulating ␤cat signaling, we first performed functional studies in the colon cancer line SW480, which harbors a truncating mutation in APC1.

Results
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