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Dive into the research topics where Eric Lau is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Lau.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2010

Emerging roles of ATF2 and the dynamic AP1 network in cancer

Pablo Lopez-Bergami; Eric Lau; Ze'ev Ronai

Cooperation among transcription factors is central for their ability to execute specific transcriptional programmes. The AP1 complex exemplifies a network of transcription factors that function in unison under normal circumstances and during the course of tumour development and progression. This Perspective summarizes our current understanding of the changes in members of the AP1 complex and the role of ATF2 as part of this complex in tumorigenesis.


Journal of Cell Science | 2012

ATF2 – at the crossroad of nuclear and cytosolic functions

Eric Lau; Ze'ev Ronai

Summary An increasing number of transcription factors have been shown to elicit oncogenic and tumor suppressor activities, depending on the tissue and cell context. Activating transcription factor 2 (ATF2; also known as cAMP-dependent transcription factor ATF-2) has oncogenic activities in melanoma and tumor suppressor activities in non-malignant skin tumors and breast cancer. Recent work has shown that the opposing functions of ATF2 are associated with its subcellular localization. In the nucleus, ATF2 contributes to global transcription and the DNA damage response, in addition to specific transcriptional activities that are related to cell development, proliferation and death. ATF2 can also translocate to the cytosol, primarily following exposure to severe genotoxic stress, where it impairs mitochondrial membrane potential and promotes mitochondrial-based cell death. Notably, phosphorylation of ATF2 by the epsilon isoform of protein kinase C (PKC&egr;) is the master switch that controls its subcellular localization and function. Here, we summarize our current understanding of the regulation and function of ATF2 in both subcellular compartments. This mechanism of control of a non-genetically modified transcription factor represents a novel paradigm for ‘oncogene addiction’.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

A Role for ATF2 in Regulating MITF and Melanoma Development

Meera Shah; Anindita Bhoumik; Vikas Goel; Antimone Dewing; Wolfgang Breitwieser; Harriet M. Kluger; Stan Krajewski; Maryla Krajewska; Jason L Dehart; Eric Lau; David M. Kallenberg; Hyeongnam Jeong; Alexey Eroshkin; Dorothy C. Bennett; Lynda Chin; Marcus C. Bosenberg; Nic Jones; Ze'ev Ronai

The transcription factor ATF2 has been shown to attenuate melanoma susceptibility to apoptosis and to promote its ability to form tumors in xenograft models. To directly assess ATF2s role in melanoma development, we crossed a mouse melanoma model (Nras(Q61K)::Ink4a⁻/⁻) with mice expressing a transcriptionally inactive form of ATF2 in melanocytes. In contrast to 7/21 of the Nras(Q61K)::Ink4a⁻/⁻ mice, only 1/21 mice expressing mutant ATF2 in melanocytes developed melanoma. Gene expression profiling identified higher MITF expression in primary melanocytes expressing transcriptionally inactive ATF2. MITF downregulation by ATF2 was confirmed in the skin of Atf2⁻/⁻ mice, in primary human melanocytes, and in 50% of human melanoma cell lines. Inhibition of MITF transcription by MITF was shown to be mediated by ATF2-JunB-dependent suppression of SOX10 transcription. Remarkably, oncogenic BRAF (V600E)-dependent focus formation of melanocytes on soft agar was inhibited by ATF2 knockdown and partially rescued upon shMITF co-expression. On melanoma tissue microarrays, a high nuclear ATF2 to MITF ratio in primary specimens was associated with metastatic disease and poor prognosis. Our findings establish the importance of transcriptionally active ATF2 in melanoma development through fine-tuning of MITF expression.


Cancer Cell | 2015

Regulation of Glutamine Carrier Proteins by RNF5 Determines Breast Cancer Response to ER Stress-Inducing Chemotherapies

Young Joo Jeon; Sihem Khelifa; Boris I. Ratnikov; David A. Scott; Yongmei Feng; Fabio Parisi; Chelsea Ruller; Eric Lau; Hyungsoo Kim; Laurence M. Brill; Tingting Jiang; David L. Rimm; Robert D. Cardiff; Gordon B. Mills; Jeffrey W. Smith; Andrei L. Osterman; Yuval Kluger; Ze'ev Ronai

Many tumor cells are fueled by altered metabolism and increased glutamine (Gln) dependence. We identify regulation of the L-glutamine carrier proteins SLC1A5 and SLC38A2 (SLC1A5/38A2) by the ubiquitin ligase RNF5. Paclitaxel-induced ER stress to breast cancer (BCa) cells promotes RNF5 association, ubiquitination, and degradation of SLC1A5/38A2. This decreases Gln uptake, levels of TCA cycle components, mTOR signaling, and proliferation while increasing autophagy and cell death. Rnf5-deficient MMTV-PyMT mammary tumors were less differentiated and showed elevated SLC1A5 expression. Whereas RNF5 depletion in MDA-MB-231 cells promoted tumorigenesis and abolished paclitaxel responsiveness, SLC1A5/38A2 knockdown elicited opposing effects. Inverse RNF5(hi)/SLC1A5/38A2(lo) expression was associated with positive prognosis in BCa. Thus, RNF5 control of Gln uptake underlies BCa response to chemotherapies.


Cancer Research | 2015

PDK1 and SGK3 contribute to the growth of BRAF mutant melanomas and are potential therapeutic targets

Marzia Scortegagna; Eric Lau; Tongwu Zhang; Yongmei Feng; Chris Sereduk; Hongwei Yin; Surya K. De; Katrina Meeth; James T. Platt; Casey G. Langdon; Ruth Halaban; Maurizio Pellecchia; Michael A. Davies; Kevin D. Brown; David F. Stern; Marcus Bosenberg; Ze'ev Ronai

Melanoma development involves members of the AGC kinase family, including AKT, PKC, and, most recently, PDK1, as elucidated recently in studies of Braf::Pten mutant melanomas. Here, we report that PDK1 contributes functionally to skin pigmentation and to the development of melanomas harboring a wild-type PTEN genotype, which occurs in about 70% of human melanomas. The PDK1 substrate SGK3 was determined to be an important mediator of PDK1 activities in melanoma cells. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of PDK1 and SGK3 attenuated melanoma growth by inducing G1 phase cell-cycle arrest. In a synthetic lethal screen, pan-PI3K inhibition synergized with PDK1 inhibition to suppress melanoma growth, suggesting that focused blockade of PDK1/PI3K signaling might offer a new therapeutic modality for wild-type PTEN tumors. We also noted that responsiveness to PDK1 inhibition associated with decreased expression of pigmentation genes and increased expression of cytokines and inflammatory genes, suggesting a method to stratify patients with melanoma for PDK1-based therapies. Overall, our work highlights the potential significance of PDK1 as a therapeutic target to improve melanoma treatment.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Fine tuning of the UPR by the ubiquitin ligases Siah1/2.

Marzia Scortegagna; Hyungsoo Kim; Jian-Liang Li; Hang Yao; Laurence M. Brill; Jaeseok Han; Eric Lau; David Bowtell; Gabriel G. Haddad; Randal J. Kaufman; Ze'ev Ronai

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) responds to changes in intracellular homeostasis through activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR). Yet, it is not known how UPR-signaling coordinates adaptation versus cell death. Previous studies suggested that signaling through PERK/ATF4 is required for cell death. We show that high levels of ER stress (i.e., ischemia-like conditions) induce transcription of the ubiquitin ligases Siah1/2 through the UPR transducers PERK/ATF4 and IRE1/sXBP1. In turn, Siah1/2 attenuates proline hydroxylation of ATF4, resulting in its stabilization, thereby augmenting ER stress output. Conversely, ATF4 activation is reduced upon Siah1/2 KD in cultured cells, which attenuates ER stress-induced cell death. Notably, Siah1a+/−::Siah2−/− mice subjected to neuronal ischemia exhibited smaller infarct volume and were protected from ischemia-induced death, compared with the wild type (WT) mice. In all, Siah1/2 constitutes an obligatory fine-tuning mechanism that predisposes cells to death under severe ER stress conditions.


Science Signaling | 2015

The transcription factor ATF2 promotes melanoma metastasis by suppressing protein fucosylation

Eric Lau; Yongmei Feng; Giuseppina Claps; Michiko N. Fukuda; Ally Perlina; Dylan Donn; Lucia B. Jilaveanu; Harriet M. Kluger; Hudson H. Freeze; Ze'ev Ronai

Suppressing ATF2 or supplementing the diet with fucose impairs growth and metastasis of melanoma in mice. Stopping melanoma metastasis with fucose Metastatic melanoma is particularly challenging to treat. Lau et al. found that activation of the transcription factor ATF2 by the kinase PKCε, which was more prevalent in advanced-stage melanomas than in primary melanocytes or early-stage tumors, promoted the metastatic behavior of melanoma cells in culture and in mice. ATF2 repressed the expression of the gene encoding fucokinase (FUK), an enzyme that promotes global protein fucosylation. Supplementing drinking water with dietary fucose suppressed the growth and metastasis of melanoma in mice, likely by promoting protein fucosylation, which enhanced cell adhesion and reduced cell migration. Thus, inhibiting PKCε or ATF2 activity or increasing protein fucosylation in tumor cells may be therapeutic for melanoma patients. Melanoma is one of the most lethal skin cancers worldwide, primarily because of its propensity to metastasize. Thus, the elucidation of mechanisms that govern metastatic propensity is urgently needed. We found that protein kinase Cε (PKCε)–mediated activation of activating transcription factor 2 (ATF2) controls the migratory and invasive behaviors of melanoma cells. PKCε-dependent phosphorylation of ATF2 promoted its transcriptional repression of the gene encoding fucokinase (FUK), which mediates the fucose salvage pathway and thus global cellular protein fucosylation. In primary melanocytes and cell lines representing early-stage melanoma, the abundance of PKCε-phosphorylated ATF2 was low, thereby enabling the expression of FUK and cellular protein fucosylation, which promoted cellular adhesion and reduced motility. In contrast, increased expression of the gene encoding PKCε and abundance of phosphorylated, transcriptionally active ATF2 were observed in advanced-stage melanomas and correlated with decreased FUK expression, decreased cellular protein fucosylation, attenuated cell adhesion, and increased cell motility. Restoring fucosylation in mice either by dietary fucose supplementation or by genetic manipulation of murine Fuk expression attenuated primary melanoma growth, increased the number of intratumoral natural killer cells, and decreased distal metastasis in murine isograft models. Tumor microarray analysis of human melanoma specimens confirmed reduced fucosylation in metastatic tumors and a better prognosis for primary melanomas that had high abundance of fucosylation. Thus, inhibiting PKCε or ATF2 or increasing protein fucosylation in tumor cells may improve clinical outcome in melanoma patients.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2013

Inhibition of melanoma development in the Nras((Q61K)) ::Ink4a(-/-) mouse model by the small molecule BI-69A11.

Yongmei Feng; Eric Lau; Marzia Scortegagna; Chelsea Ruller; Surya K. De; Elisa Barile; Stan Krajewski; Pedro Aza-Blanc; Roy Williams; Anthony B. Pinkerton; Michael R. Jackson; Lynda Chin; Maurizio Pellecchia; Marcus Bosenberg; Ze'ev Ronai

To date, there are no effective therapies for tumors bearing NRAS mutations, which are present in 15–20% of human melanomas. Here we extend our earlier studies where we demonstrated that the small molecule BI‐69A11 inhibits the growth of melanoma cell lines. Gene expression analysis revealed the induction of interferon‐ and cell death‐related genes that were associated with responsiveness of melanoma cell lines to BI‐69A11. Strikingly, the administration of BI‐69A11 inhibited melanoma development in genetically modified mice bearing an inducible form of activated Nras and a deletion of the Ink4a gene (Nras(Q61K)::Ink4a−/−). Biweekly administration of BI‐69A11 starting at 10 weeks or as late as 24 weeks after the induction of mutant Nras expression inhibited melanoma development (100 and 36%, respectively). BI‐69A11 treatment did not inhibit the development of histiocytic sarcomas, which constitute about 50% of the tumors in this model. BI‐69A11‐resistant Nras(Q61K)::Ink4a−/− tumors exhibited increased CD45 expression, reflective of immune cell infiltration and upregulation of gene networks associated with the cytoskeleton, DNA damage response, and small molecule transport. The ability to attenuate the development of NRAS mutant melanomas supports further development of BI‐69A11 for clinical assessment.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2013

Inhibition of Melanoma Growth by Small Molecules That Promote the Mitochondrial Localization of ATF2

Tal Varsano; Eric Lau; Yongmei Feng; Marine Garrido; Loribelle Milan; Susanne Heynen-Genel; Christian A. Hassig; Ze'ev Ronai

Purpose: Effective therapy for malignant melanoma, the leading cause of death from skin cancer, remains an area of significant unmet need in oncology. The elevated expression of PKCϵ in advanced metastatic melanoma results in the increased phosphorylation of the transcription factor ATF2 on threonine 52, which causes its nuclear localization and confers its oncogenic activities. The nuclear-to-mitochondrial translocation of ATF2 following genotoxic stress promotes apoptosis, a function that is largely lost in melanoma cells, due to its confined nuclear localization. Therefore, promoting the nuclear export of ATF2, which sensitizes melanoma cells to apoptosis, represents a novel therapeutic modality. Experimental Design: We conducted a pilot high-throughput screen of 3,800 compounds to identify small molecules that promote melanoma cell death by inducing the cytoplasmic localization of ATF2. The imaging-based ATF2 translocation assay was conducted using UACC903 melanoma cells that stably express doxycycline-inducible GFP-ATF2. Results: We identified two compounds (SBI-0089410 and SBI-0087702) that promoted the cytoplasmic localization of ATF2, reduced cell viability, inhibited colony formation, cell motility, and anchorage-free growth, and increased mitochondrial membrane permeability. SBI-0089410 inhibited the 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-l3-acetate (TPA)–induced membrane translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms, whereas both compounds decreased ATF2 phosphorylation by PKCϵ and ATF2 transcriptional activity. Overexpression of either constitutively active PKCϵ or phosphomimic mutant ATF2T52E attenuated the cellular effects of the compounds. Conclusion: The imaging-based high-throughput screen provides a proof-of-concept for the identification of small molecules that block the oncogenic addiction to PKCϵ signaling by promoting ATF2 nuclear export, resulting in mitochondrial membrane leakage and melanoma cell death. Clin Cancer Res; 19(10); 2710–22. ©2013 AACR.


Oncogene | 2015

Transcriptional repression of IFNβ1 by ATF2 confers melanoma resistance to therapy.

Eric Lau; John R. Sedy; Cindy Sander; Misa Austin Shaw; Yongmei Feng; Marzia Scortegagna; Giuseppina Claps; Steven E. Robinson; Phil F. Cheng; Rohith Srivas; Stephen Soonthornvacharin; Trey Ideker; Marcus Bosenberg; Rene Gonzalez; William H. Robinson; Sumit K. Chanda; Carl F. Ware; Reinhard Dummer; Dave S.B. Hoon; John M. Kirkwood; Ze'ev Ronai

The resistance of melanoma to current treatment modalities represents a major obstacle for durable therapeutic response, and thus the elucidation of mechanisms of resistance is urgently needed. The crucial functions of activating transcription factor-2 (ATF2) in the development and therapeutic resistance of melanoma have been previously reported, although the precise underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we report a protein kinase C-ɛ (PKCɛ)- and ATF2-mediated mechanism that facilitates resistance by transcriptionally repressing the expression of interferon-β1 (IFNβ1) and downstream type-I IFN signaling that is otherwise induced upon exposure to chemotherapy. Treatment of early-stage melanomas expressing low levels of PKCɛ with chemotherapies relieves ATF2-mediated transcriptional repression of IFNβ1, resulting in impaired S-phase progression, a senescence-like phenotype and increased cell death. This response is lost in late-stage metastatic melanomas expressing high levels of PKCɛ. Notably, nuclear ATF2 and low expression of IFNβ1 in melanoma tumor samples correlates with poor patient responsiveness to biochemotherapy or neoadjuvant IFN-α2a. Conversely, cytosolic ATF2 and induction of IFNβ1 coincides with therapeutic responsiveness. Collectively, we identify an IFNβ1-dependent, cell-autonomous mechanism that contributes to the therapeutic resistance of melanoma via the PKCɛ–ATF2 regulatory axis.

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Hyungsoo Kim

Seoul National University

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Michael A. Davies

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Tongwu Zhang

National Institutes of Health

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Hongwei Yin

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Kevin M. Brown

National Institutes of Health

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Lynda Chin

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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