학술논문

IMP dehydrogenase-2 drives aberrant nucleolar activity and promotes tumorigenesis in glioblastoma
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Cell Biology. 21(8)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Rare Diseases
Cancer
Genetics
Brain Cancer
Brain Disorders
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Carcinogenesis
Cell Line
Tumor
Cell Nucleolus
Cell Proliferation
Cell Transformation
Neoplastic
Glioblastoma
Humans
IMP Dehydrogenase
RNA
Ribosomal
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
In many cancers, high proliferation rates correlate with elevation of rRNA and tRNA levels, and nucleolar hypertrophy. However, the underlying mechanisms linking increased nucleolar transcription and tumorigenesis are only minimally understood. Here we show that IMP dehydrogenase-2 (IMPDH2), the rate-limiting enzyme for de novo guanine nucleotide biosynthesis, is overexpressed in the highly lethal brain cancer glioblastoma. This leads to increased rRNA and tRNA synthesis, stabilization of the nucleolar GTP-binding protein nucleostemin, and enlarged, malformed nucleoli. Pharmacological or genetic inactivation of IMPDH2 in glioblastoma reverses these effects and inhibits cell proliferation, whereas untransformed glia cells are unaffected by similar IMPDH2 perturbations. Impairment of IMPDH2 activity triggers nucleolar stress and growth arrest of glioblastoma cells even in the absence of functional p53. Our results reveal that upregulation of IMPDH2 is a prerequisite for the occurance of aberrant nucleolar function and increased anabolic processes in glioblastoma, which constitutes a primary event in gliomagenesis.