학술논문

Asparagine couples mitochondrial respiration to ATF4 activity and tumor growth
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Metabolism. 33(5)
Subject
Cancer
Activating Transcription Factor 4
Animals
Asparagine
Aspartic Acid
Cell Line
Tumor
Cell Proliferation
Diet
Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins
Humans
Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1
Metformin
Mice
Mice
Inbred NOD
Mitochondria
Neoplasms
Nucleotides
Survival Rate
asparaginase
asparagine
cancer metabolism
cancer treatment
dietary restriction
metformin
respiration
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Endocrinology & Metabolism
Language
Abstract
Mitochondrial respiration is critical for cell proliferation. In addition to producing ATP, respiration generates biosynthetic precursors, such as aspartate, an essential substrate for nucleotide synthesis. Here, we show that in addition to depleting intracellular aspartate, electron transport chain (ETC) inhibition depletes aspartate-derived asparagine, increases ATF4 levels, and impairs mTOR complex I (mTORC1) activity. Exogenous asparagine restores proliferation, ATF4 and mTORC1 activities, and mTORC1-dependent nucleotide synthesis in the context of ETC inhibition, suggesting that asparagine communicates active respiration to ATF4 and mTORC1. Finally, we show that combination of the ETC inhibitor metformin, which limits tumor asparagine synthesis, and either asparaginase or dietary asparagine restriction, which limit tumor asparagine consumption, effectively impairs tumor growth in multiple mouse models of cancer. Because environmental asparagine is sufficient to restore tumor growth in the context of respiration impairment, our findings suggest that asparagine synthesis is a fundamental purpose of tumor mitochondrial respiration, which can be harnessed for therapeutic benefit to cancer patients.