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1.
Dev Cell ; 2024 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38823395

ABSTRACT

Control of cellular identity requires coordination of developmental programs with environmental factors such as nutrient availability, suggesting that perturbing metabolism can alter cell state. Here, we find that nucleotide depletion and DNA replication stress drive differentiation in human and murine normal and transformed hematopoietic systems, including patient-derived acute myeloid leukemia (AML) xenografts. These cell state transitions begin during S phase and are independent of ATR/ATM checkpoint signaling, double-stranded DNA break formation, and changes in cell cycle length. In systems where differentiation is blocked by oncogenic transcription factor expression, replication stress activates primed regulatory loci and induces lineage-appropriate maturation genes despite the persistence of progenitor programs. Altering the baseline cell state by manipulating transcription factor expression causes replication stress to induce genes specific for alternative lineages. The ability of replication stress to selectively activate primed maturation programs across different contexts suggests a general mechanism by which changes in metabolism can promote lineage-appropriate cell state transitions.

2.
Cell Chem Biol ; 30(9): 1156-1168.e7, 2023 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37689063

ABSTRACT

A challenge for screening new anticancer drugs is that efficacy in cell culture models is not always predictive of efficacy in patients. One limitation of standard cell culture is a reliance on non-physiological nutrient levels, which can influence cell metabolism and drug sensitivity. A general assessment of how physiological nutrients affect cancer cell response to small molecule therapies is lacking. To address this, we developed a serum-derived culture medium that supports the proliferation of diverse cancer cell lines and is amenable to high-throughput screening. We screened several small molecule libraries and found that compounds targeting metabolic enzymes were differentially effective in standard compared to serum-derived medium. We exploited the differences in nutrient levels between each medium to understand why medium conditions affected the response of cells to some compounds, illustrating how this approach can be used to screen potential therapeutics and understand how their efficacy is modified by available nutrients.


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Humans , Cell Line , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology
3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36909640

ABSTRACT

A challenge for screening new candidate drugs to treat cancer is that efficacy in cell culture models is not always predictive of efficacy in patients. One limitation of standard cell culture is a reliance on non-physiological nutrient levels to propagate cells. Which nutrients are available can influence how cancer cells use metabolism to proliferate and impact sensitivity to some drugs, but a general assessment of how physiological nutrients affect cancer cell response to small molecule therapies is lacking. To enable screening of compounds to determine how the nutrient environment impacts drug efficacy, we developed a serum-derived culture medium that supports the proliferation of diverse cancer cell lines and is amenable to high-throughput screening. We used this system to screen several small molecule libraries and found that compounds targeting metabolic enzymes were enriched as having differential efficacy in standard compared to serum-derived medium. We exploited the differences in nutrient levels between each medium to understand why medium conditions affected the response of cells to some compounds, illustrating how this approach can be used to screen potential therapeutics and understand how their efficacy is modified by available nutrients.

4.
Trends Cancer ; 8(11): 884-886, 2022 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36153305

ABSTRACT

To thrive in a hypoxic and nutrient-limited tumor microenvironment, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cells rewire their metabolism. Understanding PDAC cell metabolism may uncover vulnerabilities that can be targeted for improved therapy. Three recent studies find that the PDAC tumor microenvironment modulates the functional consequences of depleting the mitochondrially localized aspartate transaminase GOT2, thus providing new insights into the metabolism of this lethal cancer.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal , Pancreatic Neoplasms , Humans , Tumor Microenvironment , Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal/pathology , Pancreatic Neoplasms/therapy , Aspartate Aminotransferases/metabolism , Pancreatic Neoplasms
5.
Nat Cell Biol ; 24(8): 1252-1264, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35927450

ABSTRACT

Nucleotide metabolism supports RNA synthesis and DNA replication to enable cell growth and division. Nucleotide depletion can inhibit cell growth and proliferation, but how cells sense and respond to changes in the relative levels of individual nucleotides is unclear. Moreover, the nucleotide requirement for biomass production changes over the course of the cell cycle, and how cells coordinate differential nucleotide demands with cell cycle progression is not well understood. Here we find that excess levels of individual nucleotides can inhibit proliferation by disrupting the relative levels of nucleotide bases needed for DNA replication and impeding DNA replication. The resulting purine and pyrimidine imbalances are not sensed by canonical growth regulatory pathways like mTORC1, Akt and AMPK signalling cascades, causing excessive cell growth despite inhibited proliferation. Instead, cells rely on replication stress signalling to survive during, and recover from, nucleotide imbalance during S phase. We find that ATR-dependent replication stress signalling is activated during unperturbed S phases and promotes nucleotide availability to support DNA replication. Together, these data reveal that imbalanced nucleotide levels are not detected until S phase, rendering cells reliant on replication stress signalling to cope with this metabolic problem and disrupting the coordination of cell growth and division.


Subject(s)
DNA Replication , Nucleotides , Cell Cycle/genetics , Cell Division , DNA Replication/genetics , Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1/metabolism , Nucleotides/genetics , Nucleotides/metabolism , S Phase
6.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 2350, 2022 04 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35487911

ABSTRACT

Cell fate commitment is driven by dynamic changes in chromatin architecture and activity of lineage-specific transcription factors (TFs). The chromatin assembly factor-1 (CAF-1) is a histone chaperone that regulates chromatin architecture by facilitating nucleosome assembly during DNA replication. Accumulating evidence supports a substantial role of CAF-1 in cell fate maintenance, but the mechanisms by which CAF-1 restricts lineage choice remain poorly understood. Here, we investigate how CAF-1 influences chromatin dynamics and TF activity during lineage differentiation. We show that CAF-1 suppression triggers rapid differentiation of myeloid stem and progenitor cells into a mixed lineage state. We find that CAF-1 sustains lineage fidelity by controlling chromatin accessibility at specific loci, and limiting the binding of ELF1 TF at newly-accessible diverging regulatory elements. Together, our findings decipher key traits of chromatin accessibility that sustain lineage integrity and point to a powerful strategy for dissecting transcriptional circuits central to cell fate commitment.


Subject(s)
Chromatin , Histone Chaperones , Chromatin Assembly Factor-1/genetics , Chromatin Assembly Factor-1/metabolism , Chromosomes/metabolism , Histone Chaperones/metabolism , Histones/metabolism
7.
Nat Metab ; 3(7): 969-982, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34155415

ABSTRACT

Colorectal cancer (CRC) requires massive iron stores, but the complete mechanisms by which CRC modulates local iron handling are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that hepcidin is activated ectopically in CRC. Mice deficient in hepcidin specifically in the colon tumour epithelium, compared with wild-type littermates, exhibit significantly diminished tumour number, burden and size in a sporadic model of CRC, whereas accumulation of intracellular iron by deletion of the iron exporter ferroportin exacerbates these tumour parameters. Metabolomic analysis of three-dimensional patient-derived CRC tumour enteroids indicates a prioritization of iron in CRC for the production of nucleotides, which is recapitulated in our hepcidin/ferroportin mouse CRC models. Mechanistically, our data suggest that iron chelation decreases mitochondrial function, thereby altering nucleotide synthesis, whereas exogenous supplementation of nucleosides or aspartate partially rescues tumour growth in patient-derived enteroids and CRC cell lines in the presence of an iron chelator. Collectively, these data suggest that ectopic hepcidin in the tumour epithelium establishes an axis to sequester iron in order to maintain the nucleotide pool and sustain proliferation in colorectal tumours.


Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/metabolism , Hepcidins/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , Mitochondria/metabolism , Nucleotides/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Humans , Mice
8.
Nature ; 593(7858): 282-288, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33828302

ABSTRACT

Cancer cells characteristically consume glucose through Warburg metabolism1, a process that forms the basis of tumour imaging by positron emission tomography (PET). Tumour-infiltrating immune cells also rely on glucose, and impaired immune cell metabolism in the tumour microenvironment (TME) contributes to immune evasion by tumour cells2-4. However, whether the metabolism of immune cells is dysregulated in the TME by cell-intrinsic programs or by competition with cancer cells for limited nutrients remains unclear. Here we used PET tracers to measure the access to and uptake of glucose and glutamine by specific cell subsets in the TME. Notably, myeloid cells had the greatest capacity to take up intratumoral glucose, followed by T cells and cancer cells, across a range of cancer models. By contrast, cancer cells showed the highest uptake of glutamine. This distinct nutrient partitioning was programmed in a cell-intrinsic manner through mTORC1 signalling and the expression of genes related to the metabolism of glucose and glutamine. Inhibiting glutamine uptake enhanced glucose uptake across tumour-resident cell types, showing that glutamine metabolism suppresses glucose uptake without glucose being a limiting factor in the TME. Thus, cell-intrinsic programs drive the preferential acquisition of glucose and glutamine by immune and cancer cells, respectively. Cell-selective partitioning of these nutrients could be exploited to develop therapies and imaging strategies to enhance or monitor the metabolic programs and activities of specific cell populations in the TME.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/metabolism , Neoplasms/pathology , Nutrients/metabolism , Tumor Microenvironment , Animals , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/immunology , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/metabolism , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/pathology , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Glucose/metabolism , Glutamine/metabolism , Humans , Lipid Metabolism , Male , Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1/metabolism , Mice , Myeloid Cells/immunology , Myeloid Cells/metabolism , Neoplasms/immunology , Tumor Microenvironment/immunology
9.
Mol Cell ; 81(4): 691-707.e6, 2021 02 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33382985

ABSTRACT

Aerobic glycolysis, or preferential fermentation of glucose-derived pyruvate to lactate despite available oxygen, is associated with proliferation across many organisms and conditions. To better understand that association, we examined the metabolic consequence of activating the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) to increase pyruvate oxidation at the expense of fermentation. We find that increasing PDH activity impairs cell proliferation by reducing the NAD+/NADH ratio. This change in NAD+/NADH is caused by increased mitochondrial membrane potential that impairs mitochondrial electron transport and NAD+ regeneration. Uncoupling respiration from ATP synthesis or increasing ATP hydrolysis restores NAD+/NADH homeostasis and proliferation even when glucose oxidation is increased. These data suggest that when demand for NAD+ to support oxidation reactions exceeds the rate of ATP turnover in cells, NAD+ regeneration by mitochondrial respiration becomes constrained, promoting fermentation, despite available oxygen. This argues that cells engage in aerobic glycolysis when the demand for NAD+ is in excess of the demand for ATP.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Glycolysis , NAD/metabolism , A549 Cells , Adenosine Triphosphate/genetics , Aerobiosis , Glucose/genetics , HeLa Cells , Humans , NAD/genetics , Oxidation-Reduction
10.
Elife ; 82019 01 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30628890

ABSTRACT

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been shown to act as important cell biological regulators including cell fate decisions but are often ignored in human genetics. Combining differential lncRNA expression during neuronal lineage induction with copy number variation morbidity maps of a cohort of children with autism spectrum disorder/intellectual disability versus healthy controls revealed focal genomic mutations affecting several lncRNA candidate loci. Here we find that a t(5:12) chromosomal translocation in a family manifesting neurodevelopmental symptoms disrupts specifically lnc-NR2F1. We further show that lnc-NR2F1 is an evolutionarily conserved lncRNA functionally enhances induced neuronal cell maturation and directly occupies and regulates transcription of neuronal genes including autism-associated genes. Thus, integrating human genetics and functional testing in neuronal lineage induction is a promising approach for discovering candidate lncRNAs involved in neurodevelopmental diseases.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder/genetics , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Mutation , Neurodevelopmental Disorders/genetics , Neurons/metabolism , RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics , Autism Spectrum Disorder/pathology , Child , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 12/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5/genetics , DNA Copy Number Variations , Female , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Humans , Male , Neurodevelopmental Disorders/pathology , Neurogenesis/genetics , Neurons/cytology , Pedigree , Translocation, Genetic/genetics
11.
J R Soc Interface ; 15(141)2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29618526

ABSTRACT

Deep learning describes a class of machine learning algorithms that are capable of combining raw inputs into layers of intermediate features. These algorithms have recently shown impressive results across a variety of domains. Biology and medicine are data-rich disciplines, but the data are complex and often ill-understood. Hence, deep learning techniques may be particularly well suited to solve problems of these fields. We examine applications of deep learning to a variety of biomedical problems-patient classification, fundamental biological processes and treatment of patients-and discuss whether deep learning will be able to transform these tasks or if the biomedical sphere poses unique challenges. Following from an extensive literature review, we find that deep learning has yet to revolutionize biomedicine or definitively resolve any of the most pressing challenges in the field, but promising advances have been made on the prior state of the art. Even though improvements over previous baselines have been modest in general, the recent progress indicates that deep learning methods will provide valuable means for speeding up or aiding human investigation. Though progress has been made linking a specific neural network's prediction to input features, understanding how users should interpret these models to make testable hypotheses about the system under study remains an open challenge. Furthermore, the limited amount of labelled data for training presents problems in some domains, as do legal and privacy constraints on work with sensitive health records. Nonetheless, we foresee deep learning enabling changes at both bench and bedside with the potential to transform several areas of biology and medicine.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/trends , Biomedical Technology/trends , Deep Learning/trends , Algorithms , Biomedical Research/methods , Decision Making , Delivery of Health Care/methods , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Disease/genetics , Drug Design , Electronic Health Records/trends , Humans , Terminology as Topic
12.
Oncotarget ; 7(19): 28169-82, 2016 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27058758

ABSTRACT

DDX3X encodes a DEAD-box family RNA helicase (DDX3) commonly mutated in medulloblastoma, a highly aggressive cerebellar tumor affecting both children and adults. Despite being implicated in several facets of RNA metabolism, the nature and scope of DDX3's interactions with RNA remain unclear. Here, we show DDX3 collaborates extensively with the translation initiation machinery through direct binding to 5'UTRs of nearly all coding RNAs, specific sites on the 18S rRNA, and multiple components of the translation initiation complex. Impairment of translation initiation is also evident in primary medulloblastomas harboring mutations in DDX3X, further highlighting DDX3's role in this process. Arsenite-induced stress shifts DDX3 binding from the 5'UTR into the coding region of mRNAs concomitant with a general reduction of translation, and both the shift of DDX3 on mRNA and decreased translation are blunted by expression of a catalytically-impaired, medulloblastoma-associated DDX3R534H variant. Furthermore, despite the global repression of translation induced by arsenite, translation is preserved on select genes involved in chromatin organization in DDX3R534H-expressing cells. Thus, DDX3 interacts extensively with RNA and ribosomal machinery to help remodel the translation landscape in response to stress, while cancer-related DDX3 variants adapt this response to selectively preserve translation.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Neoplasms/genetics , DEAD-box RNA Helicases/genetics , Medulloblastoma/genetics , Protein Biosynthesis/genetics , Stress, Physiological/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/genetics , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Transcriptome
13.
Mol Cell ; 62(1): 34-46, 2016 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27058786

ABSTRACT

Studying cancer metabolism gives insight into tumorigenic survival mechanisms and susceptibilities. In melanoma, we identify HEXIM1, a transcription elongation regulator, as a melanoma tumor suppressor that responds to nucleotide stress. HEXIM1 expression is low in melanoma. Its overexpression in a zebrafish melanoma model suppresses cancer formation, while its inactivation accelerates tumor onset in vivo. Knockdown of HEXIM1 rescues zebrafish neural crest defects and human melanoma proliferation defects that arise from nucleotide depletion. Under nucleotide stress, HEXIM1 is induced to form an inhibitory complex with P-TEFb, the kinase that initiates transcription elongation, to inhibit elongation at tumorigenic genes. The resulting alteration in gene expression also causes anti-tumorigenic RNAs to bind to and be stabilized by HEXIM1. HEXIM1 plays an important role in inhibiting cancer cell-specific gene transcription while also facilitating anti-cancer gene expression. Our study reveals an important role for HEXIM1 in coupling nucleotide metabolism with transcriptional regulation in melanoma.


Subject(s)
Melanoma/metabolism , Positive Transcriptional Elongation Factor B/genetics , Pyrimidines/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Humans , Melanoma/genetics , Melanoma/pathology , Melanoma, Experimental , Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors , Transcription, Genetic , Tumor Suppressor Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
14.
Nat Methods ; 13(6): 489-92, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27111506

ABSTRACT

The complexity of transcriptome-wide protein-RNA interaction networks is incompletely understood. While emerging studies are greatly expanding the known universe of RNA-binding proteins, methods for the discovery and characterization of protein-RNA interactions remain resource intensive and technically challenging. Here we introduce a UV-C crosslinking and immunoprecipitation platform, irCLIP, which provides an ultraefficient, fast, and nonisotopic method for the detection of protein-RNA interactions using far less material than standard protocols.


Subject(s)
Immunoprecipitation/methods , RNA-Binding Proteins/analysis , Ultraviolet Rays , Binding Sites , Cross-Linking Reagents/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , HeLa Cells , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Humans , Photochemical Processes , RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/radiation effects , Sensitivity and Specificity , Transcriptome
15.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 23(3): 231-8, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26878240

ABSTRACT

RNA functions at enhancers remain mysterious. Here we show that the 7SK small nuclear RNA (snRNA) inhibits enhancer transcription by modulating nucleosome position. 7SK occupies enhancers and super enhancers genome wide in mouse and human cells, and it is required to limit enhancer-RNA initiation and synthesis in a manner distinct from promoter pausing. Clustered elements at super enhancers uniquely require 7SK to prevent convergent transcription and DNA-damage signaling. 7SK physically interacts with the BAF chromatin-remodeling complex, recruits BAF to enhancers and inhibits enhancer transcription by modulating chromatin structure. In turn, 7SK occupancy at enhancers coincides with that of Brd4 and is exquisitely sensitive to the bromodomain inhibitor JQ1. Thus, 7SK uses distinct mechanisms to counteract the diverse consequences of pervasive transcription that distinguish super enhancers, enhancers and promoters.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Enhancer Elements, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation , Nucleosomes/metabolism , RNA, Small Nuclear/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic , Animals , Cell Line , Humans , Mice
16.
RNA ; 21(1): 135-43, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25411354

ABSTRACT

RNA-protein interactions are central to biological regulation. Cross-linking immunoprecipitation (CLIP)-seq is a powerful tool for genome-wide interrogation of RNA-protein interactomes, but current CLIP methods are limited by challenging biochemical steps and fail to detect many classes of noncoding and nonhuman RNAs. Here we present FAST-iCLIP, an integrated pipeline with improved CLIP biochemistry and an automated informatic pipeline for comprehensive analysis across protein coding, noncoding, repetitive, retroviral, and nonhuman transcriptomes. FAST-iCLIP of Poly-C binding protein 2 (PCBP2) showed that PCBP2-bound CU-rich motifs in different topologies to recognize mRNAs and noncoding RNAs with distinct biological functions. FAST-iCLIP of PCBP2 in hepatitis C virus-infected cells enabled a joint analysis of the PCBP2 interactome with host and viral RNAs and their interplay. These results show that FAST-iCLIP can be used to rapidly discover and decipher mechanisms of RNA-protein recognition across the diversity of human and pathogen RNAs.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Profiling , RNA, Untranslated/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Base Sequence , Cell Line, Tumor , Consensus Sequence , Hepacivirus/physiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Humans , Immunoprecipitation , Protein Binding , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , RNA, Viral/metabolism , Transcriptome
17.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 21(7): 585-90, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24929436

ABSTRACT

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are important regulators of cell fate, yet little is known about mechanisms controlling lncRNA expression. Here we show that transcription is quantitatively different for lncRNAs and mRNAs--as revealed by deficiency of Dicer (Dcr), a key RNase that generates microRNAs (miRNAs). Dcr loss in mouse embryonic stem cells led unexpectedly to decreased levels of hundreds of lncRNAs. The canonical Dgcr8-Dcr-miRNA pathway is required for robust lncRNA transcriptional initiation and elongation. Computational and genetic epistasis analyses demonstrated that Dcr activation of the oncogenic transcription factor cMyc is partly responsible for lncRNA expression. A quantitative metric of mRNA-lncRNA decoupling revealed that Dcr and cMyc differentially regulate lncRNAs versus mRNAs in diverse cell types and in vivo. Thus, numerous lncRNAs may be modulated as a class in development and disease, notably where Dcr and cMyc act.


Subject(s)
DEAD-box RNA Helicases/physiology , MicroRNAs/physiology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc/physiology , RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics , Ribonuclease III/physiology , Transcription, Genetic , Animals , DEAD-box RNA Helicases/genetics , DEAD-box RNA Helicases/metabolism , Down-Regulation , Gene Knockout Techniques , Mice , MicroRNAs/genetics , MicroRNAs/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/physiology , Ribonuclease III/genetics , Ribonuclease III/metabolism , Transcriptome
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