본문으로 건너뛰기
← 뒤로

Ubiquitination-Driven Reprogramming of Proteostasis in Metastasis.

Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) 2026 Vol.13(12) p. e22165

Wei D, Chen J, Xu Y

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Metastasis, the leading cause of cancer-related mortality, poses a fundamental proteostatic challenge, requiring rapid and precise proteome remodeling in response to stress.

이 논문을 인용하기

BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Wei D, Chen J, Xu Y (2026). Ubiquitination-Driven Reprogramming of Proteostasis in Metastasis.. Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), 13(12), e22165. https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202522165
MLA Wei D, et al.. "Ubiquitination-Driven Reprogramming of Proteostasis in Metastasis.." Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), vol. 13, no. 12, 2026, pp. e22165.
PMID 41560323

Abstract

Metastasis, the leading cause of cancer-related mortality, poses a fundamental proteostatic challenge, requiring rapid and precise proteome remodeling in response to stress. While ubiquitination is linked to protein degradation, our recent work uncovered a non-canonical, metastasis-promoting mechanism centered on DCAF12, a substrate receptor of the Cullin 4-RING ubiquitin ligase complex. DCAF12 mediates non-degradative ubiquitination of TRiC/CCT chaperonin subunits, allosterically activating the chaperonin to enhance its assembly, stability, and folding capacity. This ubiquitination-dependent activation circuit enables metastatic cells to efficiently fold and stabilize diverse pro-metastatic proteins, thereby facilitating dynamic proteome reprogramming. Herein, we present the DCAF12-TRiC/CCT axis as a central regulatory component of this adaptive response, explore its evolutionary basis, and propose DCAF12 as a prototype for a broader class of "DCAFome" regulators of chaperone function. This mechanistic understanding establishes a direct rationale for therapeutically targeting this axis to disrupt adaptive proteostasis. Moreover, we outline a therapeutic paradigm termed "proteostatic stress creation." This framework encompasses a spectrum of strategies, from precision protein-protein interaction inhibitors to state-selective degraders of DCAF12 or its ubiquitinated chaperonin subunits. These approaches can potentially disrupt the DCAF12-TRiC/CCT axis, thereby undermining the proteostatic resilience that sustains advanced cancers.

MeSH Terms

Proteostasis; Humans; Ubiquitination; Neoplasm Metastasis; Animals; Neoplasms

같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)