作者
Angela Bononi,Carlotta Giorgi,Simone Patergnani,David Larson,Kaitlyn Verbruggen,Mika Tanji,Laura Pellegrini,Valentina Signorato,Federica Olivetto,Sandra Pastorino,Masaki Nasu,Andrea Napolitano,Giovanni Gaudino,Paul Morris,G Sakamoto,Laura K. Ferris,Alberto Danese,Andrea Raimondi,Carlo Tacchetti,Shafi Kuchay,Harvey I. Pass,El Bachir Affar,Haining Yang,Paolo Pinton,Michele Carbone
摘要
BRCA1-associated protein 1 (BAP1) regulates calcium flux in the endoplasmic reticulum to facilitate the execution of apoptosis, unveiling a new facet of the role of BAP1 as an environmental tumour suppressor. BAP1 is a tumour suppressor associated with germline mutations in several malignancies including uveal melanoma and mesothelioma. BAP1 tumour suppressor activity has previously been linked to its nuclear role in maintaining genome integrity. Here, the authors reveal a new role for BAP1 in the endoplasmic reticulum, where it regulates calcium flux to facilitate the execution of apoptosis. Loss of BAP1 function prevents apoptosis in transformed cells with accumulated DNA damage. The results unveil a new facet of the role of BAP1 as an environmental tumour suppressor. BRCA1-associated protein 1 (BAP1) is a potent tumour suppressor gene that modulates environmental carcinogenesis1,2,3. All carriers of inherited heterozygous germline BAP1-inactivating mutations (BAP1+/−) developed one and often several BAP1−/− malignancies in their lifetime4, mostly malignant mesothelioma, uveal melanoma2,5, and so on6,7,8,9,10. Moreover, BAP1-acquired biallelic mutations are frequent in human cancers8,11,12,13,14. BAP1 tumour suppressor activity has been attributed to its nuclear localization, where it helps to maintain genome integrity15,16,17. The possible activity of BAP1 in the cytoplasm is unknown. Cells with reduced levels of BAP1 exhibit chromosomal abnormalities and decreased DNA repair by homologous recombination18, indicating that BAP1 dosage is critical. Cells with extensive DNA damage should die and not grow into malignancies. Here we discover that BAP1 localizes at the endoplasmic reticulum. Here, it binds, deubiquitylates, and stabilizes type 3 inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R3), modulating calcium (Ca2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum into the cytosol and mitochondria, promoting apoptosis. Reduced levels of BAP1 in BAP1+/− carriers cause reduction both of IP3R3 levels and of Ca2+ flux, preventing BAP1+/− cells that accumulate DNA damage from executing apoptosis. A higher fraction of cells exposed to either ionizing or ultraviolet radiation, or to asbestos, survive genotoxic stress, resulting in a higher rate of cellular transformation. We propose that the high incidence of cancers in BAP1+/− carriers results from the combined reduced nuclear and cytoplasmic activities of BAP1. Our data provide a mechanistic rationale for the powerful ability of BAP1 to regulate gene–environment interaction in human carcinogenesis.