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        <title>Nova Reader - Subject</title>
        <link>https://www.novareader.co</link>
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        <copyright>Newgen KnowledgeWorks</copyright>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Rac1-PAK1 regulation of Rab11 cycling promotes junction destabilization]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766065801234-c4179abc-9847-4c1a-88b3-c0d9905d78b6/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202002114</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Rac1 promotes malignancy. Oncogenic Rac1 and its effector PAK1 disrupt junctions via internalization of cadherin adhesion receptors by bulk fluid uptake. PAK1 phosphorylates a key regulator of intracellular trafficking, RabGDIβ, thereby modulating its affinity with specific partners (i.e., Rab11) to re-route cadherin away from cell–cell contacts.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Rac1 GTPase is hyperactivated in tumors and contributes to malignancy. Rac1 disruption of junctions requires its effector PAK1, but the precise mechanisms are unknown. Here, we show that E-cadherin is internalized via micropinocytosis in a PAK1–dependent manner without catenin dissociation and degradation. In addition to internalization, PAK1 regulates E-cadherin transport by fine-tuning Rab small GTPase function. PAK1 phosphorylates a core Rab regulator, RabGDIβ, but not RabGDIα. Phosphorylated RabGDIβ preferentially associates with Rab5 and Rab11, which is predicted to promote Rab retrieval from membranes. Consistent with this hypothesis, Rab11 is activated by Rac1, and inhibition of Rab11 function partially rescues E-cadherin destabilization. Thus, Rac1 activation reduces surface cadherin levels as a net result of higher bulk flow of membrane uptake that counteracts Rab11-dependent E-cadherin delivery to junctions (recycling and/or exocytosis). This unique small GTPase crosstalk has an impact on Rac1 and PAK1 regulation of membrane remodeling during epithelial dedifferentiation, adhesion, and motility.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-29T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[miR-146 connects stem cell identity with metabolism and pharmacological resistance in breast cancer]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766065541628-4d65a4e6-4ca8-47f2-827e-1f8653258a39/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202009053</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Tordonato et al. reveal miRNA-146 as a specific marker for breast stem cells and for cancer stem cells. miR-146 maintains the stem cell identity and coordinates a transcriptional and metabolic program, distinct from bulk cells, connected to the refractoriness to antifolate drugs.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Although ectopic overexpression of miRNAs can influence mammary normal and cancer stem cells (SCs/CSCs), their physiological relevance remains uncertain. Here, we show that miR-146 is relevant for SC/CSC activity. MiR-146a/b expression is high in SCs/CSCs from human/mouse primary mammary tissues, correlates with the basal-like breast cancer subtype, which typically has a high CSC content, and specifically distinguishes cells with SC/CSC identity. Loss of miR-146 reduces SC/CSC self-renewal in vitro and compromises patient-derived xenograft tumor growth in vivo<i>,</i> decreasing the number of tumor-initiating cells, thus supporting its pro-oncogenic function. Transcriptional analysis in mammary SC-like cells revealed that miR-146 has pleiotropic effects, reducing adaptive response mechanisms and activating the exit from quiescent state, through a complex network of finely regulated miRNA targets related to quiescence, transcription, and one-carbon pool metabolism. Consistent with these findings, SCs/CSCs display innate resistance to anti-folate chemotherapies either in vitro or in vivo that can be reversed by miR-146 depletion, unmasking a “hidden vulnerability” exploitable for the development of anti-CSC therapies.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-02T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[The DNA damage response links human squamous proliferation with differentiation]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056343555-90151a13-de11-479d-8ee0-5ac804e38b52/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202001063</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Molinuevo et al. show a novel control of epidermoid differentiation by the DNA damage response signals and propose a model for automatic cleansing of stratified self-renewal epithelia facing genotoxic agents.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">How rapid cell multiplication leads to cell differentiation in developing tissues is still enigmatic. This question is central to morphogenesis, cell number control, and homeostasis. Self-renewal epidermoid epithelia are continuously exposed to mutagens and are the most common target of cancer. Unknown mechanisms commit rapidly proliferating cells to post-mitotic terminal differentiation. We have over-activated or inhibited the endogenous DNA damage response (DDR) pathways by combinations of activating TopBP1 protein, specific shRNAs, or chemical inhibitors for ATR, ATM, and/or DNA-PK. The results dissect and demonstrate that these signals control keratinocyte differentiation in proliferating cells independently of actual DNA damage. The DDR limits keratinocyte multiplication upon hyperproliferative stimuli. Moreover, knocking down H2AX, a common target of the DDR pathways, inhibits the epidermoid phenotype. The results altogether show that the DDR is required to maintain the balance proliferation differentiation and suggest that is part of the squamous program. We propose a homeostatic model where genetic damage is automatically and continuously cleansed by cell-autonomous mechanisms.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-10-01T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[ECM deposition is driven by caveolin-1–dependent regulation of exosomal biogenesis and cargo sorting]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056292533-a46ea0f2-e5c8-44ee-89bd-221d27e437e5/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202006178</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Secretion and deposition of non-collagen ECM components is an elusive topic. Albacete-Albacete et al. identify exosome biogenesis and exosomal cargo sorting as novel mechanisms by which the stromal remodeling regulator caveolin-1 modulates ECM deposition, through the control of multivesicular body cholesterol content and plasticity.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The composition and physical properties of the extracellular matrix (ECM) critically influence tumor progression, but the molecular mechanisms underlying ECM layering are poorly understood. Tumor–stroma interaction critically depends on cell communication mediated by exosomes, small vesicles generated within multivesicular bodies (MVBs). We show that caveolin-1 (Cav1) centrally regulates exosome biogenesis and exosomal protein cargo sorting through the control of cholesterol content at the endosomal compartment/MVBs. Quantitative proteomics profiling revealed that Cav1 is required for exosomal sorting of ECM protein cargo subsets, including Tenascin-C (TnC), and for fibroblast-derived exosomes to efficiently deposit ECM and promote tumor invasion. Cav1-driven exosomal ECM deposition not only promotes local stromal remodeling but also the generation of distant ECM-enriched stromal niches in vivo. Cav1 acts as a cholesterol rheostat in MVBs, determining sorting of ECM components into specific exosome pools and thus ECM deposition. This supports a model by which Cav1 is a central regulatory hub for tumor–stroma interactions through a novel exosome-dependent ECM deposition mechanism.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-10-09T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[p53 deficiency triggers dysregulation of diverse cellular processes in physiological oxygen]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056202694-a2f9c65e-67d1-4dc1-9b9c-4915e255219d/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201908212</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Using oncogene-expressing cells to interrogate p53 function under physiological oxygen conditions, Valente et al. show that p53 deficiency drives concurrent dysregulation of a range of cellular processes. These findings highlight the pleiotropic effects of p53 inactivation.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The mechanisms by which <i>TP53</i>, the most frequently mutated gene in human cancer, suppresses tumorigenesis remain unclear. p53 modulates various cellular processes, such as apoptosis and proliferation, which has led to distinct cellular mechanisms being proposed for p53-mediated tumor suppression in different contexts. Here, we asked whether during tumor suppression p53 might instead regulate a wide range of cellular processes. Analysis of mouse and human oncogene-expressing wild-type and p53-deficient cells in physiological oxygen conditions revealed that p53 loss concurrently impacts numerous distinct cellular processes, including apoptosis, genome stabilization, DNA repair, metabolism, migration, and invasion. Notably, some phenotypes were uncovered only in physiological oxygen. Transcriptomic analysis in this setting highlighted underappreciated functions modulated by p53, including actin dynamics. Collectively, these results suggest that p53 simultaneously governs diverse cellular processes during transformation suppression, an aspect of p53 function that would provide a clear rationale for its frequent inactivation in human cancer.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-09-04T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Long noncoding RNA amplified in lung cancer rewires cancer pathways]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973877511-a5d0dc16-d66e-46f5-b51a-9817c02f45a2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202007098</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Martínez-Terroba and Dimitrova preview work from Athie et al., which demonstrates that the lncRNA <i>ALAL-1</i> promotes lung cancer cell proliferation and immune evasion.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Athie et al. (2020. <i>J. Cell Biol</i>. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201908078) identify <i>ALAL-1</i>, a lncRNA frequently amplified or overexpressed in lung cancer, as an oncogenic driver, capable of promoting the proliferation and altering the immunogenicity of lung cancer cells.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-08-27T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Cancer cells educate natural killer cells to a metastasis-promoting cell state]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973519468-4aa6322e-f091-48c9-86ec-460e2d302df2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202001134</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Chan et al. show that natural killer (NK) cells can be reprogrammed by breast cancer cells to promote metastasis. Reprogramming can be blocked by targeting NK cell inhibitory receptors TIGIT or KLRG1 or inhibiting DNA methyltransferases, which suggests new approaches to prevent or treat metastasis.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Natural killer (NK) cells have potent antitumor and antimetastatic activity. It is incompletely understood how cancer cells escape NK cell surveillance. Using ex vivo and in vivo models of metastasis, we establish that keratin-14<sup>+</sup> breast cancer cells are vulnerable to NK cells. We then discovered that exposure to cancer cells causes NK cells to lose their cytotoxic ability and promote metastatic outgrowth. Gene expression comparisons revealed that healthy NK cells have an active NK cell molecular phenotype, whereas tumor-exposed (teNK) cells resemble resting NK cells. Receptor–ligand analysis between teNK cells and tumor cells revealed multiple potential targets. We next showed that treatment with antibodies targeting TIGIT, antibodies targeting KLRG1, or small-molecule inhibitors of DNA methyltransferases (DMNT) each reduced colony formation. Combinations of DNMT inhibitors with anti-TIGIT or anti-KLRG1 antibodies further reduced metastatic potential. We propose that NK-directed therapies targeting these pathways would be effective in the adjuvant setting to prevent metastatic recurrence.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-07-09T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Interferon-stimulated gene 15 accelerates replication fork progression inducing chromosomal breakage]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765840075720-e8b8e0ea-0fc0-48b8-907b-7c50a989b9e5/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202002175</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Raso et al. find that high levels of interferon-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15), which is very frequent in cancer and robustly induced by pathogen infection, accelerate DNA replication fork progression, impacting genome stability and response to chemotherapy.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">DNA replication is highly regulated by the ubiquitin system, which plays key roles upon stress. The ubiquitin-like modifier ISG15 (interferon-stimulated gene 15) is induced by interferons, bacterial and viral infection, and DNA damage, but it is also constitutively expressed in many types of cancer, although its role in tumorigenesis is still largely elusive. Here, we show that ISG15 localizes at the replication forks, in complex with PCNA and the nascent DNA, where it regulates DNA synthesis. Indeed, high levels of ISG15, intrinsic or induced by interferon-β, accelerate DNA replication fork progression, resulting in extensive DNA damage and chromosomal aberrations. This effect is largely independent of ISG15 conjugation and relies on ISG15 functional interaction with the DNA helicase RECQ1, which promotes restart of stalled replication forks. Additionally, elevated ISG15 levels sensitize cells to cancer chemotherapeutic treatments. We propose that ISG15 up-regulation exposes cells to replication stress, impacting genome stability and response to genotoxic drugs.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-29T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Protrudin-mediated ER–endosome contact sites promote MT1-MMP exocytosis and cell invasion]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765838240173-3c756911-006b-4408-afc9-48f7d83a11d6/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202003063</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Cancer cell dissemination is facilitated by small actin-rich plasma membrane protrusions called invadopodia. Pedersen et al. now show that invadopodia maturation and function depend on contact site formation between the endoplasmic reticulum and late endosomes, which promotes translocation of the latter to growing invadopodia.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Cancer cells break tissue barriers by use of small actin-rich membrane protrusions called invadopodia. Complete invadopodia maturation depends on protrusion outgrowth and the targeted delivery of the matrix metalloproteinase MT1-MMP via endosomal transport by mechanisms that are not known. Here, we show that the ER protein Protrudin orchestrates invadopodia maturation and function. Protrudin formed contact sites with MT1-MMP–positive endosomes that contained the RAB7-binding Kinesin-1 adaptor FYCO1, and depletion of RAB7, FYCO1, or Protrudin inhibited MT1-MMP–dependent extracellular matrix degradation and cancer cell invasion by preventing anterograde translocation and exocytosis of MT1-MMP. Moreover, when endosome translocation or exocytosis was inhibited by depletion of Protrudin or Synaptotagmin VII, respectively, invadopodia were unable to expand and elongate. Conversely, when Protrudin was overexpressed, noncancerous cells developed prominent invadopodia-like protrusions and showed increased matrix degradation and invasion. Thus, Protrudin-mediated ER–endosome contact sites promote cell invasion by facilitating translocation of MT1-MMP–laden endosomes to the plasma membrane, enabling both invadopodia outgrowth and MT1-MMP exocytosis.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-01T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Protrudin in protrudinG invadopodia: Membrane contact sites and cell invasion]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765834381865-8e1d30fc-27ba-4086-b0d6-9c108351dba2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202006146</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Arora and Olkkonen discuss a recent study from Pedersen et al. on the role of Protrudin in cancer cell invasion.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Invadopodia are dynamic protrusions that harbor matrix metalloproteinases for pericellular matrix degradation. However, the mechanisms underlying their maturation are poorly understood. Pedersen et al. (2020. <i>J. Cell Biol.</i>
https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202003063) demonstrate a dual role of Protrudin in invadopodia elongation and matrix degradation, central to cell invasion and cancer metastasis.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-07-21T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Phosphorylation of PKCδ by FER tips the balance from EGFR degradation to recycling]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765759897819-688a7d66-b868-4fc5-96d2-399a660f1a7e/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201902073</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Lonic et al. show that phosphorylation of Y374-PKCδ by FER arrests the maturation of early to late endosomes by inhibiting the release of RAB5 from nascent late endosomes. This promotes EGFR recycling and sustained signaling in triple-negative breast cancer.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Receptor degradation terminates signaling by activated receptor tyrosine kinases. Degradation of EGFR occurs in lysosomes and requires the switching of RAB5 for RAB7 on late endosomes to enable their fusion with the lysosome, but what controls this critical switching is poorly understood. We show that the tyrosine kinase FER alters PKCδ function by phosphorylating it on Y374, and that phospho-Y374-PKCδ prevents RAB5 release from nascent late endosomes, thereby inhibiting EGFR degradation and promoting the recycling of endosomal EGFR to the cell surface. The rapid association of phospho-Y374-PKCδ with EGFR-containing endosomes is diminished by PTPN14, which dephosphorylates phospho-Y374-PKCδ. In triple-negative breast cancer cells, the FER-dependent phosphorylation of PKCδ enhances EGFR signaling and promotes anchorage-independent cell growth. Importantly, increased Y374-PKCδ phosphorylation correlating with arrested late endosome maturation was identified in ∼25% of triple-negative breast cancer patients, suggesting that dysregulation of this pathway may contribute to their pathology.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-01-07T00:00]]></pubDate>
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