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      CDK13 Mutations Drive Melanoma via Accumulation of Prematurely Terminated Transcripts

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          Abstract

          Transcriptional Cyclin Dependent Kinases modulate RNA Polymerase II function to impact gene expression. Here, we show that CDK13 is mutated in 4% of patient melanomas and mutation or downregulation is associated with poor overall survival. Mutant CDK13 lacks kinase activity and overexpression in zebrafish leads to accelerated melanoma. CDK13 mutant fish and human melanomas accumulate prematurely terminated RNAs that are translated into truncated proteins. CDK13 binds to and regulates the phosphorylation of ZC3H14, a member of the Poly A e Xosome Targeting (PAXT) RNA degradation complex. ZC3H14 phosphorylation recruits the PAXT complex to degrade prematurely terminated polyadenylated transcripts in the nucleus. In the presence of mutant CDK13, ZC3H14 phosphorylation is compromised and consequently fails to recruit the PAXT complex, leading to truncated transcript stabilization. This work establishes a role for CDK13 and the PAXT nuclear RNA degradation complex in cancer and has prognostic significance for melanoma patients with mutated or downregulated CDK13.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          November 05 2019
          Article
          10.1101/824193
          a78ed521-89e0-45f0-8066-9ca0ff856f2e
          © 2019
          History

          Biophysics,Biotechnology
          Biophysics, Biotechnology

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