AKR1B10 dictates c-Myc stability to suppress colorectal cancer metastasis via PP2A nitration.

TitleAKR1B10 dictates c-Myc stability to suppress colorectal cancer metastasis via PP2A nitration.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2025
AuthorsWu X, Huang S, Gao J, Huang S, Chen L, Zhao Z, Pu R, Ma X, Liu X, He W, Song M
JournalSci Adv
Volume11
Issue34
Paginationeadv6937
Date Published2025 Aug 22
ISSN2375-2548
KeywordsAldo-Keto Reductases, Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Colorectal Neoplasms, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Humans, Mice, Neoplasm Metastasis, Protein Phosphatase 2, Protein Stability, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc, Signal Transduction
Abstract

Metabolic enzymes, critical for cellular homeostasis, are frequently co-opted in a disease-specific manner to drive cancer progression. Here, we identify aldo-keto reductase family 1 member B10 (AKR1B10), down-regulated in gastrointestinal cancers, as a pivotal metastasis suppressor correlating with improved colorectal cancer (CRC) prognosis. Mechanistically, AKR1B10 activates protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) by preventing redox-regulated nitration of its B56α subunit, preserving holoenzyme assembly and enabling c-Myc dephosphorylation at serine-62. Loss of AKR1B10 disrupts this pathway, stabilizing c-Myc, which drives integrin signaling and metastatic dissemination in CRC. We further demonstrate that lysine-125 of AKR1B10 is essential for its interaction with PP2A-Cα and B56α nitration, thereby attenuating CRC metastatic aggressiveness. Pharmacological restoration of PP2A activity effectively mitigates metastasis associated with AKR1B10 loss. In addition, c-Myc transcriptionally represses AKR1B10, establishing a feedback loop that sustains its down-regulation and enhances metastatic progression. This study uncovers an antimetastatic mechanism involving AKR1B10-mediated PP2A activation and highlights its potential as a biomarker and therapeutic target.

DOI10.1126/sciadv.adv6937
Alternate JournalSci Adv
PubMed ID40845116

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