DAXX drives de novo lipogenesis and contributes to tumorigenesis

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作者
Iqbal Mahmud
Guimei Tian
Jia Wang
Tarun E. Hutchinson
Brandon J. Kim
Nikee Awasthee
Seth Hale
Chengcheng Meng
Allison Moore
Liming Zhao
Jessica E. Lewis
Aaron Waddell
Shangtao Wu
Julia M. Steger
McKenzie L. Lydon
Aaron Chait
Lisa Y. Zhao
Haocheng Ding
Jian-Liang Li
Hamsa Thayele Purayil
Zhiguang Huo
Yehia Daaka
Timothy J. Garrett
Daiqing Liao
机构
[1] University of Florida College of Medicine,Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, UF Health Cancer Center
[2] University of Florida,Southeast Center for Integrated Metabolomics, Clinical and Translational Science Institute
[3] University of Florida College of Medicine,Department of Pathology, Immunology and Laboratory Medicine
[4] University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
[5] The Affiliated Cancer Hospital of Zhengzhou University & Henan Cancer Hospital,Department of Biostatistics
[6] University of Florida,Integrative Bioinformatics
[7] National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences,Department of Medicine
[8] University of Florida College of Medicine,undefined
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摘要
Cancer cells exhibit elevated lipid synthesis. In breast and other cancer types, genes involved in lipid production are highly upregulated, but the mechanisms that control their expression remain poorly understood. Using integrated transcriptomic, lipidomic, and molecular studies, here we report that DAXX is a regulator of oncogenic lipogenesis. DAXX depletion attenuates, while its overexpression enhances, lipogenic gene expression, lipogenesis, and tumor growth. Mechanistically, DAXX interacts with SREBP1 and SREBP2 and activates SREBP-mediated transcription. DAXX associates with lipogenic gene promoters through SREBPs. Underscoring the critical roles for the DAXX-SREBP interaction for lipogenesis, SREBP2 knockdown attenuates tumor growth in cells with DAXX overexpression, and DAXX mutants unable to bind SREBP1/2 have weakened activity in promoting lipogenesis and tumor growth. Remarkably, a DAXX mutant deficient of SUMO-binding fails to activate SREBP1/2 and lipogenesis due to impaired SREBP binding and chromatin recruitment and is defective of stimulating tumorigenesis. Hence, DAXX’s SUMO-binding activity is critical to oncogenic lipogenesis. Notably, a peptide corresponding to DAXX’s C-terminal SUMO-interacting motif (SIM2) is cell-membrane permeable, disrupts the DAXX-SREBP1/2 interactions, and inhibits lipogenesis and tumor growth. These results establish DAXX as a regulator of lipogenesis and a potential therapeutic target for cancer therapy.
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