Extracellular AGR2 triggers lung tumour cell proliferation through repression of p21(CIP1)
Résumé
The human Anterior GRadient 2 (AGR2) protein is an Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)-resident protein which belongs to the Protein-Disulfide Isomerase (PDI) superfamily and is involved to productive protein folding in the ER. As such AGR2, often found overexpressed in adenocarcinomas, contributes to tumour development by enhancing ER proteostasis. We previously demonstrated that AGR2 is secreted (extracellular AGR2 (eAGR2)) in the tumour microenvironment and plays extracellular roles independent of its ER functions. Herein, we show that eAGR2 triggers cell proliferation and characterize the underlying molecular mechanisms. We demonstrate that eAGR2 enhances tumour cell growth by repressing the tumour suppressor p21(CIP1). Our findings shed light on a novel mechanism through which eAGR2 behaves as a growth factor in the tumour microenvironment, independently of its ER function, thus promoting tumour cell growth through repression of p21(CIP1). Our results provide a rationale for targeting eAGR2/p21(CIP1)-based signalling as a potential therapeutic target to impede tumour growth.
Domaines
Cancer
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Fessart et al. - 2020 - Extracellular AGR2 triggers lung tumour cell proli.pdf (9.06 Mo)
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