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Collagen Prolyl Hydroxylation-Dependent Metabolic Perturbation Governs Epigenetic Remodeling and Mesenchymal Transition in Pluripotent and Cancer Cells

Authors :
Agnese Migliaccio
Cristina D'Aniello
Eduardo J. Patriarca
Dario De Cesare
Andrea Palamidessi
Laura Casalino
Maria R. Matarazzo
Federica Cermola
Miriam Gagliardi
Giorgio Scita
Francesca Varrone
Gabriella Minchiotti
Luca G Wanderlingh
Source :
Cancer research (Chic. Ill.) 79 (2019): 3235–3250. doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-2070, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:D'Aniello, Cristina; Cermola, Federica; Palamidessi, Andrea; Wanderlingh, Luca G.; Gagliardi, Miriam; Migliaccio, Agnese; Varrone, Francesca; Casalino, Laura; Matarazzo, Maria R.; De Cesare, Dario; Scita, Giorgio; Patriarca, Eduardo J.; Minchiotti, Gabriella/titolo:Collagen Prolyl Hydroxylation-Dependent Metabolic Perturbation Governs Epigenetic Remodeling and Mesenchymal Transition in Pluripotent and Cancer Cells/doi:10.1158%2F0008-5472.CAN-18-2070/rivista:Cancer research (Chic. Ill.)/anno:2019/pagina_da:3235/pagina_a:3250/intervallo_pagine:3235–3250/volume:79
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Collagen prolyl hydroxylation (CPH), which is catalyzed by prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H), is the most prevalent posttranslational modification in humans and requires vitamin C (VitC). Here, we demonstrate that CPH acts as an epigenetic modulator of cell plasticity. Increased CPH induced global DNA/histone methylation in pluripotent stem and tumor cells and promoted cell state transition (CST). Interfering with CPH by either genetic ablation of P4H subunit alpha-2 (P4HA2) or pharmacologic treatment reverted epigenetic changes and antagonized CST. Mechanistically, we suggest that CPH modifies the epigenetic landscape by reducing VitC for DNA and histone demethylases. Repurposed drugs targeting CPH-mediated metabolic perturbation, such as the antiasthmatic budesonide, blocked metastatic dissemination of breast cancer cells in vivo by preventing mesenchymal transition. Our study provides mechanistic insights into how metabolic cues and epigenetic factors integrate to control CST and paves the way for the development of novel antimetastatic strategies. Significance: A phenotype-based high-throughput screening reveals unforeseen metabolic control of cell plasticity and identifies budesonide as a drug candidate for metastatic cancer.

Details

ISSN :
15387445
Volume :
79
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f9d3b95d02b497db9352fa4812754d14
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-2070