Resistance to diverse drugs and ultraviolet light conferred by overexpression of a novel human 26 S proteasome subunit

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Abstract

We have investigated the usefulness of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe as a model organism for the discovery of novel modes of drug resistance in human cells. In fission yeast, overexpression of the essential pad1+ gene confers pleiotropic drug resistance through a pathway involving an AP-1 transcription factor encoded by pap1+. We have identified POH1, a human pad1 homologue that can substitute fully for pad1+ and induce AP-1-dependent drug resistance in fission yeast. POH1 also confers P-glycoprotein-independent resistance to taxol (paclitaxel), doxorubicin, 7- hydroxy-staurosporine, and ultraviolet light when transiently overexpressed in mammalian cells. Poh1 is a previously unidentified component of the human 26 S proteasome, a multiprotein complex that degrades proteins targeted for destruction by the ubiquitin pathway. Hence, Poh1 is part of a conserved mechanism that determines cellular susceptibility to cytotoxic agents, perhaps by influencing the ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis of transcription factors.

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Spataro, V., Toda, T., Craig, R., Seeger, M., Dubiel, W., Harris, A. L., & Norbury, C. (1997). Resistance to diverse drugs and ultraviolet light conferred by overexpression of a novel human 26 S proteasome subunit. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(48), 30470–30475. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.48.30470

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