Effect of ubiquitin protease system on DNA damage response in prostate cancer (Review)

Exp Ther Med. 2023 Nov 24;27(1):33. doi: 10.3892/etm.2023.12321. eCollection 2024 Jan.

Abstract

Genomic instability is an essential hallmark of cancer, and cellular DNA damage response (DDR) defects drive tumorigenesis by disrupting genomic stability. Several studies have identified abnormalities in DDR-associated genes, and a dysfunctional ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is the most common molecular event in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (PCa). For example, mutations in Speckle-type BTB/POZ protein-Ser119 result in DDR downstream target activation deficiency. Skp2 excessive upregulation inhibits homologous recombination repair and promotes cell growth and migration. Abnormally high expression of a deubiquitination enzyme, ubiquitin-specific protease 12, stabilizes E3 ligase MDM2, which further leads to p53 degradation, causing DDR interruption and genomic instability. In the present review, the basic pathways of DDR, UPS dysfunction, and its induced DDR alterations mediated by genomic instability, and especially the potential application of UPS and DDR alterations as biomarkers and therapeutic targets in PCa treatment, were described.

Keywords: DNA damage response; cancer treatment; prostate cancer; ubiquitin-proteasome system.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Funding: This research was funded by The National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 32270821), Natural Science Foundation of Ningbo (grant no. 2021J065), the Youth Science and technology innovation leader of Ningbo (grant no. 2023QL052) and the K.C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University.