1. Academic Validation
  2. Rad6B is a positive regulator of beta-catenin stabilization

Rad6B is a positive regulator of beta-catenin stabilization

  • Cancer Res. 2008 Mar 15;68(6):1741-50. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-07-2111.
Malathy P V Shekhar 1 Brigitte Gerard Robert J Pauley Bart O Williams Larry Tait
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Breast Cancer Program, Karmanos Cancer Institute, Detroit, MI 4820, USA. shekharm@karmanos.org
Abstract

Mutations in beta-catenin or other Wnt pathway components that cause beta-catenin accumulation occur rarely in breast Cancer. However, there is some evidence of beta-catenin protein accumulation in a subset of breast tumors. We have recently shown that Rad6B, an ubiquitin-conjugating Enzyme, is a transcriptional target of beta-catenin/TCF. Here, we show that forced Rad6B overexpression in MCF10A breast cells induces beta-catenin accumulation, which despite being ubiquitinated is stable and transcriptionally active. A similar relationship between Rad6B, beta-catenin ubiquitination, and transcriptional activity was found in WS-15 and MDA-MB-231 breast Cancer cells, and mouse mammary tumor virus-Wnt-1 mammary tumor-derived cells, implicating Rad6B in physiologic regulation of beta-catenin stability and activity. Ubiquitinated beta-catenin was detectable in chromatin immunoprecipitations performed with beta-catenin antibody in MDA-MB-231 but not MCF10A cells. Rad6B silencing caused suppression of beta-catenin monoubiquitination and polyubiquitination, and transcriptional activity. These effects were accompanied by a reduction in intracellular beta-catenin but with minimal effects on cell membrane-associated beta-catenin. Measurement of beta-catenin protein stability by cycloheximide treatment showed that Rad6B silencing specifically decreases the stability of high molecular beta-catenin with minimal effect upon the 90-kDa nascent form. In vitro ubiquitination assays confirmed that Rad6B mediates beta-catenin polyubiquitination, and ubiquitin chain extensions involve lysine 63 residues that are insensitive to 26S Proteasome. These findings, combined with our previous data that Rad6B is a transcriptional target of beta-catenin, reveal a positive regulatory feedback loop between Rad6B and beta-catenin and a novel mechanism of beta-catenin stabilization/activation in breast Cancer cells.

Figures