Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Tsunedomi Ryouichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 1000361639
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Switching of the c-Myc protein degradation pathway depending on the PP2A-B55α complex levels.

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Sana Ando
Shunta Ikeda
Keiko Tanaka
Yuri Tomabechi
Atsushi Yamagata
Mikako Shirouzu
Ryouichi Tsunedomi
Hiroaki Nagano
Shunya Tsuji
Koichi Sato
Takashi Ohama

Summary

The transcription factor c-Myc is a master oncoprotein that regulates over 15% of all genes. Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a crucial tumor suppressor, destabilizes c-Myc protein. Classically, PP2A-mediated dephosphorylation of Ser62 followed by Thr58 phosphorylation was thought to promote ubiquitination of c-Myc by the E3 ligase F-box and WD repeat domain containing 7 (FBXW7). However, recent evidence indicates that FBXW7 preferentially recognizes c-Myc when both Thr58 and Ser62 are phosphorylated, leaving the mechanism underlying PP2A-induced c-Myc degradation unsolved. Here, we demonstrate that the PP2A-B55α complex, which directly dephosphorylates c-Myc at Thr58, regulates two distinct degradation pathways in a biphasic manner: B55α suppression increases Thr58 phosphorylation and enhances FBXW7-dependent degradation, whereas B55α overexpression promotes Thr58-independent, ubiquitin-protein ligase E3 component N-recognin 5 (UBR5)-mediated degradation. We further show that the PP2A-B55α complex binds and dephosphorylates UBR5. In contrast, B55δ, which belongs to the same B55 family and shares a common core structure, exhibits weaker UBR5 binding affinity and fails to induce c-Myc degradation. Our findings identify PP2A-B55α as a context-dependent molecular switch for c-Myc degradation and provide a unified framework that resolves the paradox linking PP2A activation to c-Myc destabilization.

Magazine(name)

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Publisher

 

Volume

123

Number Of Pages

11

StartingPage

e2509374123

EndingPage

 

Date of Issue

2026-03-17

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1073/pnas.2509374123

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID