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Systematic identification of genes involved in metabolic acid stress resistance in yeast and their potential as cancer targets

Authors :
Shin, John J.
Aftab, Qurratulain
Austin, Pamela
McQueen, Jennifer A.
Poon, Tak
Li, Shu Chen
Young, Barry P.
Roskelley, Calvin D.
Loewen, Christopher J. R.
Source :
Disease Models & Mechanisms, Disease Models & Mechanisms, Vol 9, Iss 9, Pp 1039-1049 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
The Company of Biologists Ltd, 2016.

Abstract

A hallmark of all primary and metastatic tumours is their high rate of glucose uptake and glycolysis. A consequence of the glycolytic phenotype is the accumulation of metabolic acid; hence, tumour cells experience considerable intracellular acid stress. To compensate, tumour cells upregulate acid pumps, which expel the metabolic acid into the surrounding tumour environment, resulting in alkalization of intracellular pH and acidification of the tumour microenvironment. Nevertheless, we have only a limited understanding of the consequences of altered intracellular pH on cell physiology, or of the genes and pathways that respond to metabolic acid stress. We have used yeast as a genetic model for metabolic acid stress with the rationale that the metabolic changes that occur in cancer that lead to intracellular acid stress are likely fundamental. Using a quantitative systems biology approach we identified 129 genes required for optimal growth under conditions of metabolic acid stress. We identified six highly conserved protein complexes with functions related to oxidative phosphorylation (mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III and IV), mitochondrial tRNA biosynthesis [glutamyl-tRNA(Gln) amidotransferase complex], histone methylation (Set1C–COMPASS), lysosome biogenesis (AP-3 adapter complex), and mRNA processing and P-body formation (PAN complex). We tested roles for two of these, AP-3 adapter complex and PAN deadenylase complex, in resistance to acid stress using a myeloid leukaemia-derived human cell line that we determined to be acid stress resistant. Loss of either complex inhibited growth of Hap1 cells at neutral pH and caused sensitivity to acid stress, indicating that AP-3 and PAN complexes are promising new targets in the treatment of cancer. Additionally, our data suggests that tumours may be genetically sensitized to acid stress and hence susceptible to acid stress-directed therapies, as many tumours accumulate mutations in mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes required for their proliferation.<br />Summary: Altered metabolism in tumours creates metabolic acid stress in tumour cells, which is a target for chemotherapeutics. We identify six new complexes with roles in resistance to metabolic acid stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17548411 and 17548403
Volume :
9
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Disease Models & Mechanisms
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....5364f53311a9dad7e7d11f08d1dc1fcb