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Autophagic signaling promotes systems-wide remodeling in skeletal muscle upon oncometabolic stress

Authors :
Walter Schiffer
David J. R. Taylor
Daniel Soetkamp
Benjamin D. Gould
Jennifer E. Van Eyk
Anna Guzman
Weston R. Spivia
Lin Tan
Heinrich Taegtmeyer
Helen B. Burks
Blake Hanson
Anja Karlstaedt
Heidi Vitrac
Philip L. Lorenzi
Rebecca Salazar
Daniel McNavish
An Q Dinh
Roberta A. Gottlieb
Koen Raedschelders
Stavros Azinas
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

About 20-30% of cancer-associated deaths are due to complications from cachexia which is characterized by skeletal muscle atrophy. Metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells causes body-wide metabolic and proteomic remodeling, which remain poorly understood. Here, we present evidence that the oncometabolite D-2-hydroxylgutarate (D2-HG) impairs NAD+ redox homeostasis in skeletal myotubes, causing atrophy via deacetylation of LC3-II by the nuclear deacetylase Sirt1. Overexpression of p300 or silencing of Sirt1 abrogate its interaction with LC3, and subsequently reduced levels of LC3 lipidation. Using RNA-sequencing and mass spectrometry-based metabolomics and proteomics, we demonstrate that prolonged treatment with the oncometabolite D2-HG in mice promotes cachexia in vivo and increases the abundance of proteins and metabolites, which are involved in energy substrate metabolism, chromatin acetylation and autophagy regulation. We further show that D2-HG promotes a sex-dependent adaptation in skeletal muscle using network modeling and machine learning algorithms. Our multi-omics approach exposes new metabolic vulnerabilities in response to D2-HG in skeletal muscle and provides a conceptual framework for identifying therapeutic targets in cachexia.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0de41df7869a7873d19bfadcb5e41a9c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.13.338202