Downregulation of DUSP6, a negative regulator of oncogenic ERK signaling, by ACA‐28 induces apoptosis in NIH/3T3 cells overexpressing HER2/ErbB2

2020 
Dual-specificity phosphatase 6 (DUSP6) is a key negative feedback regulator of the member of the RAS-ERK MAPK signaling pathway that is associated with cellular proliferation and differentiation. Deterioration of DUSP6 expression could therefore result in deregulated growth activity. We have previously discovered ACA-28, a novel anti-cancer compound with a unique property to stimulate ERK phosphorylation and induce apoptosis in ERK-active melanoma cells. However, the mechanism of cancer cell-specific-apoptosis by ACA-28 remains obscure. Here, we investigated the involvement of DUSP6 in the mechanisms of the ACA-28-mediated apoptosis by using the NIH/3T3 cells overexpressing HER2/ErbB2 (A4-15 cells), as A4-15 exhibited higher ERK phosphorylation and are more susceptible to ACA-28 than NIH/3T3. We showed that A4-15 exhibited high DUSP6 protein levels, which require ERK activation. Notably, the silencing of the DUDSP6 gene by siRNA inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis in A4-15, but not in NIH/3T3, indicating that A4-15 requires high DUSP6 expression for growth. Importantly, ACA-28 preferentially downregulated the DUSP6 protein and proliferation in A4-15 via the proteasome, whilst it stimulated ERK phosphorylation. Collectively, the upregulation of DUSP6 may exert a growth-promoting role in cancer cells overexpressing HER2. DUSP6 downregulation in ERK-active cancer cells might have the potential as a novel cancer measure.
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