Back to Search Start Over

Lysine acetylation restricts mutant IDH2 activity to optimize transformation in AML cells

Authors :
Ross L. Levine
Michelle M. Le Beau
Chuan He
Jianjun Chen
Rukang Zhang
William Blum
Olatoyosi Odenike
Sagar Lonial
Allen Zhu
Martha Arellano
Jing Chen
Dong Chen
Wendy Stock
Yuancheng Li
Xue Gao
Lei Dong
Hui Mao
Mei Wang
Titus J. Boggon
Rui Su
Shannon Elf
Rong Wu
Hao Fan
Christopher Famulare
Siyuan Xia
Source :
Mol Cell
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) 1 and 2 play a pathogenic role in cancers, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML), by producing oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG). We recently reported that tyrosine phosphorylation activates IDH1 R132H mutant in AML cells. Here, we show that mutant IDH2 (mIDH2) R140Q commonly has K413 acetylation, which negatively regulates mIDH2 activity in human AML cells by attenuating dimerization and blocking binding of substrate (α-ketoglutarate) and cofactor (NADPH). Mechanistically, K413 acetylation of mitochondrial mIDH2 is achieved through a series of hierarchical phosphorylation events mediated by tyrosine kinase FLT3, which phosphorylates mIDH2 to recruit upstream mitochondrial acetyltransferase ACAT1 and simultaneously activates ACAT1 and inhibits upstream mitochondrial deacetylase SIRT3 through tyrosine phosphorylation. Moreover, we found that the intrinsic enzyme activity of mIDH2 is much higher than mIDH1, thus the inhibitory K413 acetylation optimizes leukemogenic ability of mIDH2 in AML cells by both producing sufficient 2-HG for transformation and avoiding cytotoxic accumulation of intracellular 2-HG.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95fbb96dba5123cdb517c9aaaef0fc72