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Título
VAV Proteins as Double Agents in Cancer: Oncogenes with Tumor Suppressor Roles
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
NFAT
NOTCH1
PTCL
RAC1
RHO GEFs
T-ALL
VAV proteins
Lung cancer
Mouse models
Oncogene
Signaling
Tumor suppressor
Clasificación UNESCO
3201.01 Oncología
Fecha de publicación
2021-09-08
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Cuadrado, M., & Robles-Valero, J. (2021). VAV proteins as double agents in cancer: Oncogenes with tumor suppressor roles. Biology, 10(9), 888.
Resumen
[EN]Guanosine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) are responsible for catalyzing the transition of small GTPases from the inactive (GDP-bound) to the active (GTP-bound) states. RHO GEFs, including VAV proteins, play essential signaling roles in a wide variety of fundamental cellular processes and in human diseases. Although the most widespread archetype in the field is that RHO GEFs exert proactive functions in cancer, recent studies in mice and humans are providing new insights into the in vivo function of these proteins in cancer. These results suggest a more complex scenario where the role of GEFs is not so clearly defined. For example, VAV1 can unexpectedly play non-catalytic tumor suppressor functions in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) by controlling the levels of the active form of NOTCH1 (ICN1). This review focuses on emerging work unveiling tumor suppressor roles for these proteins that should prompt a reevaluation of the role of VAV GEF family in tumor biology.
URI
ISSN
2079-7737
DOI
10.3390/biology10090888
Versión del editor
Nivel Educativo
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