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40


Autoregulatory control of mitochondrial glutathione homeostasis

Liu, Yuyang; Liu, Shanshan; Tomar, Anju; Yen, Frederick S; Unlu, Gokhan; Ropek, Nathalie; Weber, Ross A; Wang, Ying; Khan, Artem; Gad, Mark; Peng, Junhui; Terzi, Erdem; Alwaseem, Hanan; Pagano, Alexandra E; Heissel, Søren; Molina, Henrik; Allwein, Benjamin; Kenny, Timothy C; Possemato, Richard L; Zhao, Li; Hite, Richard K; Vinogradova, Ekaterina V; Mansy, Sheref S; Birsoy, Kıvanç
Mitochondria must maintain adequate amounts of metabolites for protective and biosynthetic functions. However, how mitochondria sense the abundance of metabolites and regulate metabolic homeostasis is not well understood. In this work, we focused on glutathione (GSH), a critical redox metabolite in mitochondria, and identified a feedback mechanism that controls its abundance through the mitochondrial GSH transporter, SLC25A39. Under physiological conditions, SLC25A39 is rapidly degraded by mitochondrial protease AFG3L2. Depletion of GSH dissociates AFG3L2 from SLC25A39, causing a compensatory increase in mitochondrial GSH uptake. Genetic and proteomic analyses identified a putative iron-sulfur cluster in the matrix-facing loop of SLC25A39 as essential for this regulation, coupling mitochondrial iron homeostasis to GSH import. Altogether, our work revealed a paradigm for the autoregulatory control of metabolic homeostasis in organelles.
PMID: 37917749
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 5608042

PhosphoDisco: a toolkit for co-regulated phosphorylation module discovery in phosphoproteomic data

Schraink, Tobias; Blumenberg, Lili; Hussey, Grant; George, Sabrina; Miller, Brecca; Mathew, Nithu; González-Robles, Tania J; Sviderskiy, Vladislav; Papagiannakopoulos, Thales; Possemato, Richard; Fenyö, David; Ruggles, Kelly V
Kinases are key players in cancer-relevant pathways and are the targets of many successful precision cancer therapies (1, 2). Phosphoproteomics is a powerful approach to study kinase activity and has been used increasingly for the characterization of tumor samples leading to the identification of novel chemotherapeutic targets and biomarkers (3-10). Finding co-regulated phosphorylation sites which represent potential kinase-substrate sets or members of the same signaling pathway allows us to harness this data to identify clinically relevant and targetable alterations in signaling cascades. Unfortunately, studies have found that databases of co-regulated phosphorylation sites (11, 12) are only experimentally supported in a small number of substrate sets (13, 14). To address the inherent challenge of defining co-regulated phosphorylation modules relevant to a given dataset, we developed PhosphoDisco, a toolkit for determining co-regulated phosphorylation modules. We applied this approach to tandem mass spectrometry based phosphoproteomic data for breast and non-small cell lung cancer and identified canonical as well as putative new phosphorylation site modules. Our analysis identified several interesting modules in each cohort. Among these was a new cell cycle checkpoint module enriched in basal breast cancer samples and a module of PRKC isozymes putatively co-regulated by CDK12 in lung cancer. We demonstrate that modules defined by PhosphoDisco can be used to further personalized cancer treatment strategies by establishing active signaling pathways in a given patient tumor or set of tumors, and in providing new ways to classify tumors based on signaling activity.
PMID: 37394063
ISSN: 1535-9484
CID: 5538912

Anti-retroviral treatment with zidovudine alters pyrimidine metabolism, reduces translation, and extends healthy longevity via ATF-4

McIntyre, Rebecca L; Molenaars, Marte; Schomakers, Bauke V; Gao, Arwen W; Kamble, Rashmi; Jongejan, Aldo; van Weeghel, Michel; van Kuilenburg, André B P; Possemato, Richard; Houtkooper, Riekelt H; Janssens, Georges E
The human population is aging, and the need for interventions to slow progression of age-related diseases (geroprotective interventions) is growing. Repurposing compounds already used clinically, usually at modified doses, allows rapid implementation of geroprotective pharmaceuticals. Here we find the anti-retroviral nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) zidovudine robustly extends lifespan and health span in C. elegans, independent of electron transport chain impairment or ROS accumulation. Rather, zidovudine treatment modifies pyrimidine metabolism and transcripts related to proteostasis. Testing regulators of mitochondrial stress and proteostasis shows that lifespan extension is dependent on activating transcription factor 4 (ATF-4). ATF-4 regulates longevity induced by mitochondrial stress, specifically communication between mitochondrial and cytosolic translation. Translation is reduced in zidovudine-treated worms, also dependent on ATF-4. Finally, we show ATF-4-dependent lifespan extension induced by didanosine, another NRTI. Altogether, our work elucidates the geroprotective effects of NRTIs such as zidovudine in vivo, via reduction of translation and ATF-4.
PMID: 36640360
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 5422792

Association of hyperglycemia and molecular subclass on survival in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma

Liu, Elisa K; Vasudevaraja, Varshini; Sviderskiy, Vladislav O; Feng, Yang; Tran, Ivy; Serrano, Jonathan; Cordova, Christine; Kurz, Sylvia C; Golfinos, John G; Sulman, Erik P; Orringer, Daniel A; Placantonakis, Dimitris; Possemato, Richard; Snuderl, Matija
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:Hyperglycemia has been associated with worse survival in glioblastoma. Attempts to lower glucose yielded mixed responses which could be due to molecularly distinct GBM subclasses. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Clinical, laboratory, and molecular data on 89 IDH-wt GBMs profiled by clinical next-generation sequencing and treated with Stupp protocol were reviewed. IDH-wt GBMs were sub-classified into RTK I (Proneural), RTK II (Classical) and Mesenchymal subtypes using whole-genome DNA methylation. Average glucose was calculated by time-weighting glucose measurements between diagnosis and last follow-up. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:= .02). Methylation clustering did not identify unique signatures associated with high or low glucose levels. Metabolomic analysis of 23 tumors showed minimal variation across metabolites without differences between molecular subclasses. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:Higher average glucose values were associated with poorer OS in RTKI and Mesenchymal IDH-wt GBM, but not RTKII. There were no discernible epigenetic or metabolomic differences between tumors in different glucose environments, suggesting a potential survival benefit to lowering systemic glucose in selected molecular subtypes.
PMCID:9653172
PMID: 36382106
ISSN: 2632-2498
CID: 5384812

Revealing vulnerabilities in DIPG through onc201 [Meeting Abstract]

Stafford, J; Abuarqoub, A; Mcanulty, T; Possemato, R; Amiel, E; Snuderl, M
Emerging evidence from clinical and preclinical studies suggests that the imipridone ONC201 is well tolerated and may have some clinical impact in discrete diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma patients (DIPG). A primary goal of our work is to determine if DIPG are uniquely sensitive to ONC201 and if so, whether ONC201 itself can be used as a tool to illuminate novel vulnerabilities in DIPG. To accomplish this, we are utilizing a combination of patient-derived cell lines as well as mouse xenografts that dovetail with a variety of molecular, epigenetic and metabolomic tools. A central finding from our work is that ONC201 primarily activates the mitochondrial protease, ClpP in DIPG patient-derived cell lines, an effect consistent with recently described ONC201 mechanism of action in other tumors. We further demonstrate that activation of ClpP by ONC201 leads to a host of downstream effects in DIPG model systems including distinctive effects on the metabolome leading to direct alterations in the unique epigenetic signature of DIPG. By directly manipulating these metabolic and epigenetic factors we provide prospective mechanistic insight into how ONC201 as well as ClpP activity impacts DIPG growth and tumorigenicity. These preclinical research findings shed light on potential therapeutic vulnerabilities in DIPG as well as ways that these strategies may be combined to enhance their potential
EMBASE:635831017
ISSN: 1523-5866
CID: 4982482

Epigenetic CRISPR screens identify Npm1 as a therapeutic vulnerability in non-small cell lung cancer

Li, Fei; Ng, Wai-Lung; Luster, Troy A; Hu, Hai; Sviderskiy, Vladislav O; Dowling, Catríona M; Hollinshead, Kate E R; Zouitine, Paula; Zhang, Hua; Huang, Qingyuan; Ranieri, Michela; Wang, Wei; Fang, Zhaoyuan; Chen, Ting; Deng, Jiehui; Zhao, Kai; So, Hon-Cheong; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Xu, Mousheng; Karatza, Angeliki; Pyon, Val; Li, Shuai; Pan, Yuanwang; Labbe, Kristen; Almonte, Christina; Poirier, John T; Miller, George; Possemato, Richard; Qi, Jun; Wong, Kwok-Kin
Despite advancements in treatment options, the overall cure and survival rates for non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) remain low. While small-molecule inhibitors of epigenetic regulators have recently emerged as promising cancer therapeutics, their application in patients with NSCLC is limited. To exploit epigenetic regulators as novel therapeutic targets in NSCLC, we performed pooled epigenome-wide CRISPR knockout screens in vitro and in vivo and identified the histone chaperone nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1) as a potential therapeutic target. Genetic ablation of Npm1 significantly attenuated tumor progression in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, KRAS-mutant cancer cells were more addicted to NPM1 expression. Genetic ablation of Npm1 rewired the balance of metabolism in cancer cells from predominant aerobic glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation and reduced the population of tumor-propagating cells. Overall, our results support NPM1 as a therapeutic vulnerability in NSCLC.
PMID: 32646968
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 4518022

Niche-Selective Inhibition of Pathogenic Th17 Cells by Targeting Metabolic Redundancy

Wu, Lin; Hollinshead, Kate E R; Hao, Yuhan; Au, Christy; Kroehling, Lina; Ng, Charles; Lin, Woan-Yu; Li, Dayi; Silva, Hernandez Moura; Shin, Jong; Lafaille, Juan J; Possemato, Richard; Pacold, Michael E; Papagiannakopoulos, Thales; Kimmelman, Alec C; Satija, Rahul; Littman, Dan R
Targeting glycolysis has been considered therapeutically intractable owing to its essential housekeeping role. However, the context-dependent requirement for individual glycolytic steps has not been fully explored. We show that CRISPR-mediated targeting of glycolysis in T cells in mice results in global loss of Th17 cells, whereas deficiency of the glycolytic enzyme glucose phosphate isomerase (Gpi1) selectively eliminates inflammatory encephalitogenic and colitogenic Th17 cells, without substantially affecting homeostatic microbiota-specific Th17 cells. In homeostatic Th17 cells, partial blockade of glycolysis upon Gpi1 inactivation was compensated by pentose phosphate pathway flux and increased mitochondrial respiration. In contrast, inflammatory Th17 cells experience a hypoxic microenvironment known to limit mitochondrial respiration, which is incompatible with loss of Gpi1. Our study suggests that inhibiting glycolysis by targeting Gpi1 could be an effective therapeutic strategy with minimum toxicity for Th17-mediated autoimmune diseases, and, more generally, that metabolic redundancies can be exploited for selective targeting of disease processes.
PMID: 32615085
ISSN: 1097-4172
CID: 4504552

KRAS4A directly regulates hexokinase 1

Amendola, Caroline R; Mahaffey, James P; Parker, Seth J; Ahearn, Ian M; Chen, Wei-Ching; Zhou, Mo; Court, Helen; Shi, Jie; Mendoza, Sebastian L; Morten, Michael J; Rothenberg, Eli; Gottlieb, Eyal; Wadghiri, Youssef Z; Possemato, Richard; Hubbard, Stevan R; Balmain, Allan; Kimmelman, Alec C; Philips, Mark R
The most frequently mutated oncogene in cancer is KRAS, which uses alternative fourth exons to generate two gene products (KRAS4A and KRAS4B) that differ only in their C-terminal membrane-targeting region1. Because oncogenic mutations occur in exons 2 or 3, two constitutively active KRAS proteins-each capable of transforming cells-are encoded when KRAS is activated by mutation2. No functional distinctions among the splice variants have so far been established. Oncogenic KRAS alters the metabolism of tumour cells3 in several ways, including increased glucose uptake and glycolysis even in the presence of abundant oxygen4 (the Warburg effect). Whereas these metabolic effects of oncogenic KRAS have been explained by transcriptional upregulation of glucose transporters and glycolytic enzymes3-5, it is not known whether there is direct regulation of metabolic enzymes. Here we report a direct, GTP-dependent interaction between KRAS4A and hexokinase 1 (HK1) that alters the activity of the kinase, and thereby establish that HK1 is an effector of KRAS4A. This interaction is unique to KRAS4A because the palmitoylation-depalmitoylation cycle of this RAS isoform enables colocalization with HK1 on the outer mitochondrial membrane. The expression of KRAS4A in cancer may drive unique metabolic vulnerabilities that can be exploited therapeutically.
PMID: 31827279
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 4234582

Minding the Ls and Qs

Possemato, Richard
PMID: 32694722
ISSN: 2522-5812
CID: 4552692

Targeting iron metabolism in breast cancer: Ferroptosis and genome stability [Meeting Abstract]

Possemato, R. L.; Sviderskiy, V. O.; Alvarez, S. W.; Terzi, E. M.
ISI:000478677000361
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 4047802