The awakening of the CDK10/Cyclin M protein kinase
Author(s)
Gamble, Carly; Colas, Pierre; Guen, Vincent; Lees, Jacqueline
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Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) play important roles in the control of fundamental cellular processes. Some of the most characterized CDKs are considered to be pertinent therapeutic targets for cancers and other diseases, and first clinical successes have recently been obtained with CDK inhibitors. Although discovered in the pre-genomic era, CDK10 attracted little attention until it was identified as a major determinant of resistance to endocrine therapy for breast cancer. In some studies, CDK10 has been shown to promote cell proliferation whereas other studies have revealed a tumor suppressor function. The recent discovery of Cyclin M as a CDK10 activating partner has allowed the unveiling of a protein kinase activity against the ETS2 oncoprotein, whose degradation is activated by CDK10/Cyclin M-mediated phosphorylation. CDK10/Cyclin M has also been shown to repress ciliogenesis and to maintain actin network architecture, through the phoshorylation of the PKN2 protein kinase and the control of RhoA stability. These findings shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying STAR syndrome, a severe human developmental genetic disorder caused by mutations in the Cyclin M coding gene. They also pave the way to a better understanding of the role of CDK10/Cyclin M in cancer.
Date issued
2017-02Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
Oncotarget
Publisher
Impact Journals/National Center for Biotechnology Information (U.S.)
Citation
Guen, Vincent J.; Gamble, Carly; Lees, Jacqueline A. and Colas, Pierre. “The Awakening of the CDK10/Cyclin M Protein Kinase.” Oncotarget (July 2015): 15024
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1949-2553