The Protein Phosphatase 4 Complex Is A Tumor Suppressor In Prostate Cancer

CANCER RESEARCH(2020)

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Abstract
Regions of recurring chromosomal deletions have been annotated in clinical prostate cancer (PCa), but for many of them there is an incomplete understanding of their contributions to disease progression. From an in vivo shRNA enrichment screen of the PCa deletome, we identified the serine threonine protein phosphatase 4 (PP4) regulatory subunit 2 (PPP4R2) as a candidate tumor suppressor, which undergoes copy number loss in 16% of primary PCa. Knockdown or CRISPR-Cas9 mediated knockout of PPP4R2 increased the growth rate of PCa xenograft tumors. Along with the catalytic subunit PP4C and an additional regulatory subunit (either PP4R3A or PP4R3B), PP4R2 forms two distinct heterotrimeric phosphatase holoenzymes. PP4R2 was critical for holoenzyme stability, as its deletion resulted in rapid, moderate downregulation of the other PP4 subunit proteins. The increased tumor growth rate and downregulation of PP4C resulting from loss of PP4R2 could be replicated by combined deletion of PPP4R3A and PPP4R3B, or by directly targeting PPP4C itself. Collectively, these findings implicated PP4C as the likely direct mediator of tumor suppression through the PP4 complex. This was confirmed in both PPP4R2 and PPP4R3A/PPP4R3B knockout cells in vivo by restoring PP4C to its normal physiological level through a dox-inducible cDNA, which reversed the accelerated tumor growth rate conferred by the deletion of the regulatory subunits. Phosphatase activity of PP4C was critical, as add-back of a catalytically dead PP4C mutant (D82A) was unable to reverse the growth rate of PPP4C knockout tumors. Interestingly, we found that the androgen receptor (AR), which is the principal therapeutic target for PCa, was co-immunoprecipitated by PP4C and its regulatory subunits. This suggests that AR could be a substrate for PP4C and is potentially present in a hyperphosphorylated and hyperactivated state in PCa that have decreased PP4 phosphatase activity. Our findings highlight a previously unappreciated tumor suppressor role for the PP4 complex in PCa, with the regulatory subunit PP4R2 providing a key function in stabilizing PP4C and thereby preserving its phosphatase activity. Citation Format: Philip A. Watson, Kayla E. Lawrence, Tejasveeta V. Nadkarni, Taslima F. Ishmael, Eugine Lee, Aura C. Agudelo Rivera, Jillian R. Love, John Wongvipat, Ling Cai, Abbas Nazir, Phillip J. Iaquinta, Kenneth Chang, Yupu Liang, Greg J. Hannon, Charles L. Sawyers. The protein phosphatase 4 complex is a tumor suppressor in prostate cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research 2020; 2020 Apr 27-28 and Jun 22-24. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(16 Suppl):Abstract nr 3430.
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