Nutrient control of splice site selection contributes to methionine addiction of cancer.

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Tác giả: Anna Andronicos, Stacey Borrego, Francisco G Carranza, Lucas Dantas de Paula, Klemens J Hertel, Peter Kaiser, Linda Lauinger, Da-Wei Lin, Harika R Pulipelli

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 384.556 *Controlled transmission television (Closed-circuit television)

Thông tin xuất bản: Germany : Molecular metabolism , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 284580

OBJECTIVE: Many cancer cells depend on exogenous methionine for proliferation, whereas non-tumorigenic cells can divide in media supplemented with the metabolic precursor homocysteine. This phenomenon is known as methionine dependence of cancer or methionine addiction. The underlying mechanisms driving this cancer-specific metabolic addiction are poorly understood. Here we find that methionine dependence is associated with severe dysregulation of pre-mRNA splicing. METHODS: We used triple-negative breast cancer cells and their methionine-independent derivatives R8 to compare RNA expression profiles in methionine and homocysteine growth media. The data set was also analyzed for alternative splicing. RESULTS: When tumorigenic cells were cultured in homocysteine medium, cancer cells failed to efficiently methylate the spliceosomal snRNP component SmD1, which resulted in reduced binding to the Survival-of-Motor-Neuron protein SMN leading to aberrant splicing. These effects were specific for cancer cells as neither Sm protein methylation nor splicing fidelity was affected when non-tumorigenic cells were cultured in homocysteine medium. Sm protein methylation is catalyzed by Protein Arginine Methyl Transferase 5 (Prmt5). Reducing methionine concentrations in the culture medium sensitized cancer cells to Prmt5 inhibition supporting a mechanistic link between methionine dependence of cancer and splicing. CONCLUSIONS: Our results link nutritional demands to splicing changes and thereby provide a link between the cancer-specific metabolic phenomenon, described as methionine addiction over 40 years ago, with a defined cellular pathway that contributes to cancer cell proliferation.
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