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Ruo-Kai Lin, Yi-Shuan Hsieh, Pinpin Lin, Han-Shui Hsu, Chih-Yi Chen, Yen-An Tang, Chung-Fan Lee, Yi-Ching Wang
Published in Volume 120, Issue 2
J Clin Invest. 2010; 120(2):521–532 doi:10.1172/JCI40706
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Figure 7
Proposed model to illustrate the accumulation of nuclear DNMT1 by NNK-induced AKT/GSK3β/βTrCP/hnRNP-U signaling leading to promoter hypermethylation and tumorigenesis.

NNK induces DNMT1 protein accumulation in the nucleus through AKT/GSK3β/βTrCP signaling and AKT/hnRNP-U/βTrCP nucleocytoplasmic shuttling. βTrCP is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that specifically interacts with and degrades DNMT1. NNK induces activation of AKT, then promotes GSK3β phosphorylation at Ser9 to form inactive GSK3β, which subsequently attenuates the ability of βTrCP to degrade DNMT1 protein. In addition, NNK activates AKT to induce interaction between phosphorylated hnRNP-U and βTrCP, which disrupts βTrCP/DNMT1 interaction. The hnRNP-U/βTrCP complex translocates to the cytoplasm, leading to DNMT1 accumulation in the nucleus. Furthermore, these NNK-induced DNMT1 proteins bind to promoters of various TSGs and result in promoter hypermethylation, which ultimately leads to tumorigenesis and poor prognosis.