Author: Si, Wenxia; Zhou, Bisheng; Xie, Wen; Li, Hui; Li, Ke; Li, Sisi; Deng, Wenbing; Shi, Pengcheng; Yuan, Chao; Ke, Tie; Ren, Xiang; Tu, Xin; Zeng, Xiaomei; Weigelt, Britta; Rubin, Brian P; Chen, Qiuyun; Xu, Chengqi; Wang, Qing Kenneth
                    Title: Angiogenic factor AGGF1 acts as a tumor suppressor by modulating p53 post-transcriptional modifications and stability via MDM2.  Cord-id: ntf2fvxc  Document date: 2020_10_15
                    ID: ntf2fvxc
                    
                    Snippet: Angiogenesis factors are widely known to promote tumor growth by increasing tumor angiogenesis in the tumor microenvironment, however, little is known whether their intracellular function is involved in tumorigenesis. Here we show that AGGF1 acts as a tumor suppressor by regulating p53 when acting inside tumor cells. AGGF1 antagonizes MDM2 function to inhibit p53 ubiquitination, increases the acetylation, phosphorylation, stability and expression levels of p53, activates transcription of p53 tar
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Angiogenesis factors are widely known to promote tumor growth by increasing tumor angiogenesis in the tumor microenvironment, however, little is known whether their intracellular function is involved in tumorigenesis. Here we show that AGGF1 acts as a tumor suppressor by regulating p53 when acting inside tumor cells. AGGF1 antagonizes MDM2 function to inhibit p53 ubiquitination, increases the acetylation, phosphorylation, stability and expression levels of p53, activates transcription of p53 target genes, and regulates cell proliferation, cell cycle, and apoptosis. AGGF1 also interacts with p53 through the FHA domain. Somatic AGGF1 variants in the FHA domain in human tumors, including p.Q467H, p.Y469 N, and p.N483T, inhibit AGGF1 activity on tumor suppression. These results identify a key role for AGGF1 in an AGGF1-MDM2-p53 signaling axis with important functions in tumor suppression, and uncover a novel trans-tumor-suppression mechanism dependent on p53. This study has potential implications in diagnosis and therapies of cancer.
 
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