학술논문

Hepatocyte odd protein shuttling (HOPS) is a bridging protein in the nucleophosmin-p19Arf network.
Document Type
Article
Source
Oncogene. 7/11/2013, Vol. 32 Issue 28, p3350-3358. 9p.
Subject
*LIVER cells
*PROTEINS
*NUCLEOPHOSMIN
*NUCLEOLUS
*GENE expression
*UBIQUITINATION
*CYTOPLASM
*NUCLEOPLASMIN
*GENETIC mutation
Language
ISSN
0950-9232
Abstract
Nucleophosmin (NPM), a ubiquitously and abundantly expressed protein, occurs in the nucleolus, shuttling between the nucleoplasm and cytoplasm. The NPM gene is mutated in almost 30% of human acute myeloid leukemia cells. NPM interacts with p53 and p19Arf, directs localization of p19Arf in the nucleolus and protects the latter from degradation. Hepatocyte odd protein shuttling (HOPS) is also a ubiquitously expressed protein that moves between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Within the nucleus of resting cells, HOPS overexpression causes cell cycle arrest in G0/G1. HOPS knockdown causes centrosome hyperamplification leading to multinucleated cells and the formation of micronuclei. We demonstrate a direct interaction of HOPS with NPM and p19Arf, resulting in a functionally active trimeric complex. NPM appeared to regulate HOPS half-life, which, in turn, stabilized p19Arf and controlled its localization in the nucleolus. These findings suggest that HOPS acts as a functional bridge in the interaction between NPM and p19Arf, providing new mechanistic insight into how NPM and p19Arf will oppose tumor cell proliferation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]