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Dive into the research topics where Charles H. Spruck is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles H. Spruck.


Nature | 1999

Deregulated cyclin E induces chromosome instability

Charles H. Spruck; Kwang-Ai Won; Steven I. Reed

Cyclin E, a regulatory subunit of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2), is an important regulator of entry into S phase in the mammalian cell cycle. In normal dividing cells, cyclin E accumulates at the G1/S-phase boundary and is degraded as cells progress through S phase. However, in many human tumours cyclin E is overexpressed and the levels of protein and kinase activity are often deregulated relative to the cell cycle. It is not understood how alterations in expression of cyclin E contribute to tumorigenesis. Here we show that constitutive cyclin-E overexpression in both immortalized rat embryo fibroblasts and human breast epithelial cells results in chromosome instability (CIN). In contrast, analogous expression of cyclin D1 or A does not increase the frequency of CIN. Cyclin-E-expressing cells that exhibit CIN have normal centrosome numbers. However, constitutive overexpression of cyclin E impairs S-phase progression, indicating that aberrant regulation of this process may be responsible for the CIN observed. These results indicate that downregulation of cyclin-E/Cdk2 kinase activity following the G1/S-phase transition may be necessary for the maintenance of karyotypic stability.


Molecular Cell | 2001

A CDK-Independent Function of Mammalian Cks1: Targeting of SCFSkp2 to the CDK Inhibitor p27Kip1

Charles H. Spruck; Heimo Strohmaier; Mark H. Watson; Adrian L. Smith; Aimee K. Ryan; Wilhelm Krek; Steven I. Reed

The Cks/Suc1 proteins associate with CDK/cyclin complexes, but their precise function(s) is not well defined. Here we demonstrate that Cks1 directs the ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis of the CDK-bound substrate p27Kip1 by the protein ubiquitin ligase (E3) SCF(Skp2). Cks1 associates with the F box protein Skp2 and is essential for recognition of the p27Kip1 substrate for ubiquitination in vivo and in vitro. Using purified recombinant proteins, we reconstituted p27Kip1 ubiquitination activity and show that it is dependent on Cks1. CKS1-/- mice are abnormally small, and cells derived from them proliferate poorly, particularly under limiting mitogen conditions, possibly due to elevated levels of p27Kip1.


Science | 2009

Control of Iron Homeostasis by an Iron-Regulated Ubiquitin Ligase

Ajay A. Vashisht; Kimberly B. Zumbrennen; Xinhua Huang; David N. Powers; Armando Durazo; Dahui Sun; Nimesh Bhaskaran; Anja Persson; Mathias Uhlén; Olle Sangfelt; Charles H. Spruck; Elizabeth A. Leibold; James A. Wohlschlegel

Iron Sensor Intracellular iron is an essential cofactor for many proteins, but can also damage macromolecules, so its levels are carefully controlled. Cellular iron homeostasis is mediated by iron regulatory proteins that regulate the expression of genes involved in iron uptake and storage. However, it is not clear how cells sense iron bioavailability (see the Perspective by Rouault). Using different approaches, Salahudeen et al. (p. 722, published online 17 September) and Vashisht et al. (p. 718, published online 17 September) have identified the F-box protein FBXL5 as a human iron sensor. FBXL5 is part of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex that regulates the degradation of iron regulatory proteins and thereby cellular iron levels. It contains a hemerythrin domain that binds iron and acts as an iron-dependent regulatory switch, causing the degradation of FBXL5 under low iron conditions. This alternative pathway for the regulation of iron homeostasis has implications for both normal cellular physiology and disease. A vertebrate hemerythrin domain in an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex senses and regulates cellular iron levels. Eukaryotic cells require iron for survival and have developed regulatory mechanisms for maintaining appropriate intracellular iron concentrations. The degradation of iron regulatory protein 2 (IRP2) in iron-replete cells is a key event in this pathway, but the E3 ubiquitin ligase responsible for its proteolysis has remained elusive. We found that a SKP1-CUL1-FBXL5 ubiquitin ligase protein complex associates with and promotes the iron-dependent ubiquitination and degradation of IRP2. The F-box substrate adaptor protein FBXL5 was degraded upon iron and oxygen depletion in a process that required an iron-binding hemerythrin-like domain in its N terminus. Thus, iron homeostasis is regulated by a proteolytic pathway that couples IRP2 degradation to intracellular iron levels through the stability and activity of FBXL5.


Cancer Research | 2004

Mutation of hCDC4 Leads to Cell Cycle Deregulation of Cyclin E in Cancer

Susanna Ekholm Reed; Charles H. Spruck; Olle Sangfelt; Frank van Drogen; Elisabeth Mueller-Holzner; Martin Widschwendter; Anders Zetterberg; Steven I. Reed

hCDC4, the gene that encodes the F-box protein responsible for targeting cyclin E for ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, has been found to be mutated in a number of primary cancers and cancer-derived cell lines. We have observed that functional inactivation of hCDC4 does not necessarily correlate with elevated levels of cyclin E in tumors. Here we show, however, that hCDC4 mutation in primary tumors correlates strongly with loss of cell cycle regulation of cyclin E. Similarly, a breast carcinoma-derived cell line mutated for hCDC4 exhibits cell cycle deregulation of cyclin E, but periodic expression is restored by reintroducing hCDC4 via retroviral transduction. Conversely, small interfering RNA-mediated silencing of hCdc4 deregulates cyclin E with respect to the cell cycle. These results indicate that hCdc4 function is an absolute prerequisite for cell cycle regulation of cyclin E levels, and loss of hCdc4 function is sufficient to deregulate cyclin E.


Oncogene | 2015

Phosphorylation of eIF4E promotes EMT and metastasis via translational control of SNAIL and MMP-3

Nathaniel Robichaud; S V del Rincón; Bonnie Huor; Tommy Alain; Luca A. Petruccelli; J Hearnden; Christophe Goncalves; S Grotegut; Charles H. Spruck; Luc Furic; Ola Larsson; William J. Muller; Wilson H. Miller; Nahum Sonenberg

The progression of cancers from primary tumors to invasive and metastatic stages accounts for the overwhelming majority of cancer deaths. Understanding the molecular events which promote metastasis is thus critical in the clinic. Translational control is emerging as an important factor in tumorigenesis. The messenger RNA (mRNA) cap-binding protein eIF4E is an oncoprotein that has an important role in cancer initiation and progression. eIF4E must be phosphorylated to promote tumor development. However, the role of eIF4E phosphorylation in metastasis is not known. Here, we show that mice in which eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) cannot be phosphorylated are resistant to lung metastases in a mammary tumor model, and that cells isolated from these mice exhibit impaired invasion. We also demonstrate that transforming growth factor-beta (TGFβ) induces eIF4E phosphorylation to promote the translation of Snail and Mmp-3 mRNAs, and the induction of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Furthermore, we describe a new model wherein EMT induced by TGFβ requires translational activation via the non-canonical TGFβ signaling branch acting through eIF4E phosphorylation.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Myc targets Cks1 to provoke the suppression of p27Kip1, proliferation and lymphomagenesis

Ulrich Keller; Jennifer B Old; Frank C. Dorsey; Jonas A. Nilsson; Lisa M. Nilsson; Kirsteen H. Maclean; Linda Chung; Chunying Yang; Charles H. Spruck; Kelli L. Boyd; Steven I. Reed; John L. Cleveland

Reduced levels of the cyclin‐dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1 connote poor prognosis in cancer. In human Burkitt lymphoma and in precancerous B cells and lymphomas arising in Eμ‐Myc transgenic mice, p27Kip1 expression is markedly reduced. We show that the transcription of the Cks1 component of the SCFSkp2 complex that is necessary for p27Kip1 ubiquitylation and degradation is induced by Myc. Further, Cks1 expression is elevated in precancerous Eμ‐Myc B cells, and high levels of Cks1 are also a hallmark of Eμ‐Myc lymphoma and of human Burkitt lymphoma. Finally, loss of Cks1 in Eμ‐Myc B cells elevates p27Kip1 levels, reduces proliferation and markedly delays lymphoma development and dissemination of disease. Therefore, Myc suppresses p27Kip1 expression, accelerates cell proliferation and promotes tumorigenesis at least in part through its ability to selectively induce Cks1.


Cancer Letters | 2008

The Fbxw7/hCdc4 tumor suppressor in human cancer.

YingMeei Tan; Olle Sangfelt; Charles H. Spruck

Fbxw7/hCdc4 is a member of the F-box family of proteins, which function as interchangeable substrate recognition components of the SCF ubiquitin ligases. SCF(Fbxw7/hCdc4) targets several important oncoproteins including c-Myc, c-Jun, cyclin E1, and Notch, for ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis. Recent studies have shown that FBXW7/hCDC4 is mutated in a variety of human tumor types, suggesting that it is a general tumor suppressor in human cancer. Alteration of Fbxw7/hCdc4 function is linked to defects in differentiation, cellular proliferation, and genetic instability. In this review, we summarize what is known about Fbxw7/hCdc4-mediated degradation in the regulation of cellular proliferation and discuss how alteration of its function contributes to human tumorigenesis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Cyclin-Dependent Kinase-Associated Proteins Cks1 and Cks2 Are Essential during Early Embryogenesis and for Cell Cycle Progression in Somatic Cells

Hanna-Stina Martinsson-Ahlzén; Vasco Liberal; Björn Grünenfelder; Susana R. Chaves; Charles H. Spruck; Steven I. Reed

ABSTRACT Cks proteins associate with cyclin-dependent kinases and have therefore been assumed to play a direct role in cell cycle regulation. Mammals have two paralogs, Cks1 and Cks2, and individually deleting the gene encoding either in the mouse has previously been shown not to impact viability. In this study we show that simultaneously disrupting CKS1 and CKS2 leads to embryonic lethality, with embryos dying at or before the morula stage after only two to four cell division cycles. RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated silencing of CKS genes in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) or HeLa cells causes cessation of proliferation. In MEFs CKS silencing leads to cell cycle arrest in G2, followed by rereplication and polyploidy. This phenotype can be attributed to impaired transcription of the CCNB1, CCNA2, and CDK1 genes, encoding cyclin B1, cyclin A, and Cdk1, respectively. Restoration of cyclin B1 expression rescues the cell cycle arrest phenotype conferred by RNAi-mediated Cks protein depletion. Consistent with a direct role in transcription, Cks2 is recruited to chromatin in general and to the promoter regions and open reading frames of genes requiring Cks function with a cell cycle periodicity that correlates with their transcription.


Oncogene | 2004

Cyclin E dysregulation and chromosomal instability in endometrial cancer.

Michael Hubalek; Martin Erdel; Andreas Gschwendtner; Heidi Fiegl; Hannes M. Müller; Georg Goebel; Elisabeth Mueller-Holzner; Christian Marth; Charles H. Spruck; Steven I. Reed; Martin Widschwendter

Deregulation of cyclin E, an activator of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2), has been associated with a broad spectrum of human malignancies. Yet the mechanism linking abnormal cyclin E expression to carcinogenesis is largely unknown. The gene encoding the F-box protein hCdc4, a key component of the molecular machinery that targets cyclin E for degradation, is frequently mutated in endometrial cancer, leading to deregulation of cyclin E expression. Here we show that hCDC4 gene mutation and hyperphosphorylation of cyclin E, a parameter that usually correlates with hCDC4 mutation, have a strong statistically significant association with polypoidy and aneuploidy in endometrial cancer. On the contrary, elevated expression of cyclin E by itself was not significantly correlated with polyploidy or aneuploidy when tumors of similar grade are evaluated. These data suggest that impairment of cell cycle regulated proteolysis of cyclin E may be linked to carcinogenesis by promoting genomic instability.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Cyclin-dependent kinase subunit (Cks) 1 or Cks2 overexpression overrides the DNA damage response barrier triggered by activated oncoproteins

Vasco Liberal; Hanna-Stina Martinsson-Ahlzén; Jennifer Liberal; Charles H. Spruck; Martin Widschwendter; Clare H. McGowan; Steven I. Reed

Cyclin-dependent kinase subunit (Cks) proteins are small cyclin-dependent kinase-interacting proteins that are frequently overexpressed in breast cancer, as well as in a broad spectrum of other human malignancies. However, the mechanistic link between Cks protein overexpression and oncogenesis is still unknown. In this work, we show that overexpression of Cks1 or Cks2 in human mammary epithelial and breast cancer-derived cells, as well as in other cell types, leads to override of the intra–S-phase checkpoint that blocks DNA replication in response to replication stress. Specifically, binding of Cks1 or Cks2 to cyclin-dependent kinase 2 confers partial resistance to the effects of inhibitory tyrosine phosphorylation mediated by the intra–S-phase checkpoint, allowing cells to continue replicating DNA even under conditions of replicative stress. Because many activated oncoproteins trigger a DNA damage checkpoint response, which serves as a barrier to proliferation and clonal expansion, Cks protein overexpression likely constitutes one mechanism whereby premalignant cells can circumvent this DNA damage response barrier, conferring a proliferative advantage under stress conditions, and therefore contributing to tumor development.

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Steven I. Reed

Scripps Research Institute

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Yvonne C. Tsai

University of Southern California

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Heimo Strohmaier

Scripps Research Institute

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Mirella Gonzalez-Zulueta

University of Southern California

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Peter W. Nichols

University of the Sunshine Coast

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Christian Marth

Innsbruck Medical University

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