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Class I HDAC inhibitors enhance YB-1 acetylation and oxidative stress to block sarcoma metastasis.

Authors :
El-Naggar AM
Somasekharan SP
Wang Y
Cheng H
Negri GL
Pan M
Wang XQ
Delaidelli A
Rafn B
Cran J
Zhang F
Zhang H
Colborne S
Gleave M
Mandinova A
Kedersha N
Hughes CS
Surdez D
Delattre O
Wang Y
Huntsman DG
Morin GB
Sorensen PH
Source :
EMBO reports [EMBO Rep] 2019 Dec 05; Vol. 20 (12), pp. e48375. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Outcomes for metastatic Ewing sarcoma and osteosarcoma are dismal and have not changed for decades. Oxidative stress attenuates melanoma metastasis, and melanoma cells must reduce oxidative stress to metastasize. We explored this in sarcomas by screening for oxidative stress sensitizers, which identified the class I HDAC inhibitor MS-275 as enhancing vulnerability to reactive oxygen species (ROS) in sarcoma cells. Mechanistically, MS-275 inhibits YB-1 deacetylation, decreasing its binding to 5'-UTRs of NFE2L2 encoding the antioxidant factor NRF2, thereby reducing NFE2L2 translation and synthesis of NRF2 to increase cellular ROS. By global acetylomics, MS-275 promotes rapid acetylation of the YB-1 RNA-binding protein at lysine-81, blocking binding and translational activation of NFE2L2, as well as known YB-1 mRNA targets, HIF1A, and the stress granule nucleator, G3BP1. MS-275 dramatically reduces sarcoma metastasis in vivo, but an MS-275-resistant YB-1K81-to-alanine mutant restores metastatic capacity and NRF2, HIF1α, and G3BP1 synthesis in MS-275-treated mice. These studies describe a novel function for MS-275 through enhanced YB-1 acetylation, thus inhibiting YB-1 translational control of key cytoprotective factors and its pro-metastatic activity.<br /> (© 2019 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1469-3178
Volume :
20
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
EMBO reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31668005
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/embr.201948375