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SPOP

About: SPOP is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 313 publications have been published within this topic receiving 13316 citations. The topic is also known as: BTBD32 & TEF2.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Adam Abeshouse1, Jaeil Ahn1, Rehan Akbani1, Adrian Ally1  +308 moreInstitutions (1)
05 Nov 2015-Cell
TL;DR: The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) has been used for a comprehensive molecular analysis of primary prostate carcinomas as discussed by the authors, revealing substantial heterogeneity among primary prostate cancers, evident in the spectrum of molecular abnormalities and its variable clinical course.

2,109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: SPOP mutations may define a new molecular subtype of prostate cancer, with mutations involving the SPOP substrate-binding cleft in 6–15% of tumors across multiple independent cohorts.
Abstract: Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men worldwide and causes over 250,000 deaths each year. Overtreatment of indolent disease also results in significant morbidity. Common genetic alterations in prostate cancer include losses of NKX3.1 (8p21) and PTEN (10q23), gains of AR (the androgen receptor gene) and fusion of ETS family transcription factor genes with androgen-responsive promoters. Recurrent somatic base-pair substitutions are believed to be less contributory in prostate tumorigenesis but have not been systematically analyzed in large cohorts. Here, we sequenced the exomes of 112 prostate tumor and normal tissue pairs. New recurrent mutations were identified in multiple genes, including MED12 and FOXA1. SPOP was the most frequently mutated gene, with mutations involving the SPOP substrate-binding cleft in 6-15% of tumors across multiple independent cohorts. Prostate cancers with mutant SPOP lacked ETS family gene rearrangements and showed a distinct pattern of genomic alterations. Thus, SPOP mutations may define a new molecular subtype of prostate cancer.

1,370 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Jan 2018-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that PD-L1 protein abundance is regulated by cyclin D–CDK4 and the cullin 3–SPOP E3 ligase via proteasome-mediated degradation, which reveals the potential for using combination treatment with CDK4/6 inhibitors and PD-1–PD-L 1 immune checkpoint blockade to enhance therapeutic efficacy for human cancers.
Abstract: Treatments that target immune checkpoints, such as the one mediated by programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and its ligand PD-L1, have been approved for treating human cancers with durable clinical benefit. However, many patients with cancer fail to respond to compounds that target the PD-1 and PD-L1 interaction, and the underlying mechanism(s) is not well understood. Recent studies revealed that response to PD-1-PD-L1 blockade might correlate with PD-L1 expression levels in tumour cells. Hence, it is important to understand the mechanistic pathways that control PD-L1 protein expression and stability, which can offer a molecular basis to improve the clinical response rate and efficacy of PD-1-PD-L1 blockade in patients with cancer. Here we show that PD-L1 protein abundance is regulated by cyclin D-CDK4 and the cullin 3-SPOP E3 ligase via proteasome-mediated degradation. Inhibition of CDK4 and CDK6 (hereafter CDK4/6) in vivo increases PD-L1 protein levels by impeding cyclin D-CDK4-mediated phosphorylation of speckle-type POZ protein (SPOP) and thereby promoting SPOP degradation by the anaphase-promoting complex activator FZR1. Loss-of-function mutations in SPOP compromise ubiquitination-mediated PD-L1 degradation, leading to increased PD-L1 levels and reduced numbers of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes in mouse tumours and in primary human prostate cancer specimens. Notably, combining CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment with anti-PD-1 immunotherapy enhances tumour regression and markedly improves overall survival rates in mouse tumour models. Our study uncovers a novel molecular mechanism for regulating PD-L1 protein stability by a cell cycle kinase and reveals the potential for using combination treatment with CDK4/6 inhibitors and PD-1-PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade to enhance therapeutic efficacy for human cancers.

577 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define a SPOP-binding consensus (SBC) and determine structures revealing recognition of SBCs from the phosphatase Puc, the transcriptional regulator Ci, and the chromatin component MacroH2A.

387 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202152
202042
201941
201842
201730
201620