A mitotic NADPH upsurge promotes chromosome segregation and tumour progression in aneuploid cancer cells

被引:0
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作者
Aoxing Cheng
Tian Xu
Weiyi You
Ting Wang
Dongming Zhang
Huimin Guo
Haiyan Zhang
Xin Pan
Yucai Wang
Liu Liu
Kaiguang Zhang
Jue Shi
Xuebiao Yao
Jing Guo
Zhenye Yang
机构
[1] University of Science and Technology of China,MOE Key Laboratory for Membraneless Organelles and Cellular Dynamics, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[2] University of Science and Technology of China,Department of Digestive Disease, The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[3] University of Science and Technology of China,The CAS Key Laboratory of Innate Immunity and Chronic Disease, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[4] Anhui Agricultural University,Center for Biological Technology
[5] University of Science and Technology of China,Core Facility Centre for Life Sciences, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[6] National Center of Biomedical Analysis of China,Center for Advanced Interdisciplinary Science and Biomedicine of IHM, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[7] University of Science and Technology of China,Department of General Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine
[8] University of Science and Technology of China,Center for Quantitative Systems Biology, Department of Physics and Department of Biology
[9] Hong Kong Baptist University,undefined
来源
Nature Metabolism | 2023年 / 5卷
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摘要
Redox metabolites have been observed to fluctuate through the cell cycle in cancer cells, but the functional impacts of such metabolic oscillations remain unknown. Here, we uncover a mitosis-specific nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) upsurge that is essential for tumour progression. Specifically, NADPH is produced by glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) upon mitotic entry, which neutralizes elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) and prevents ROS-mediated inactivation of mitotic kinases and chromosome missegregation. Mitotic activation of G6PD depends on the phosphorylation of its co-chaperone protein BAG3 at threonine 285, which results in dissociation of inhibitory BAG3. Blocking BAG3T285 phosphorylation induces tumour suppression. A mitotic NADPH upsurge is present in aneuploid cancer cells with high levels of ROS, while nearly unobservable in near-diploid cancer cells. High BAG3T285 phosphorylation is associated with worse prognosis in a cohort of patients with microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer. Our study reveals that aneuploid cancer cells with high levels of ROS depend on a G6PD-mediated NADPH upsurge in mitosis to protect them from ROS-induced chromosome missegregation.
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页码:1141 / 1158
页数:17
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