Understanding Retinoblastoma Post-Translational Regulation for the Design of Targeted Cancer Therapies

Publication date

2025-04-25T09:22:53Z

2025-04-25T09:22:53Z

2022-03-01

2025-04-22T14:35:36Z

Abstract

Simple Summary Rb1 is a regulator of cell cycle progression and genomic stability. This review focuses on post-translational modifications, their effect on Rb1 interactors, and their role in intracellular signaling in the context of cancer development. Finally, we highlight potential approaches to harness these post-translational modifications to design novel effective anticancer therapies. The retinoblastoma protein (Rb1) is a prototypical tumor suppressor protein whose role was described more than 40 years ago. Together with p107 (also known as RBL1) and p130 (also known as RBL2), the Rb1 belongs to a family of structurally and functionally similar proteins that inhibits cell cycle progression. Given the central role of Rb1 in regulating proliferation, its expression or function is altered in most types of cancer. One of the mechanisms underlying Rb-mediated cell cycle inhibition is the binding and repression of E2F transcription factors, and these processes are dependent on Rb1 phosphorylation status. However, recent work shows that Rb1 is a convergent point of many pathways and thus the regulation of its function through post-translational modifications is more complex than initially expected. Moreover, depending on the context, downstream signaling can be both E2F-dependent and -independent. This review seeks to summarize the most recent research on Rb1 function and regulation and discuss potential avenues for the design of novel cancer therapies.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

MDPI

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051265

Cancers, 2022, vol. 14, num. 5

https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051265

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Rights

cc-by (c) Janostiak, Radoslav et al., 2022

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/

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