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HIF1α Suppresses Tumor Cell Proliferation through Inhibition of Aspartate Biosynthesis
Author(s) -
Florinda MeléndezRodríguez,
Andrés A. Urrutia,
Doriane Lorendeau,
Gianmarco Rinaldi,
O. Roche,
Nuray Böğürcü,
Marta Ortega Muelas,
Claudia MesaCiller,
Guillermo Turiel,
Antonio Bouthelier,
Pablo HernansanzAgustín,
Ainara Elorza,
Elia Escasany,
Qilong Oscar Yang Li,
Mar TorresCapelli,
Daniel Tello,
Fuertes Esther,
Enrique Fraga,
Antonio Martı́nez-Ruiz,
Belén Pérez,
J.M. Giménez Bachs,
A.S. Salinas Sánchez,
Till Acker,
Ricardo SánchezPrieto,
SarahMaria Fendt,
Katrien De Bock,
Julián Aragonés
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.01.106
Subject(s) - cytosol , glutamine , cell growth , biosynthesis , biology , repressor , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , mitochondrion , cell culture , psychological repression , enzyme , amino acid , transcription factor , gene , gene expression , genetics
Cellular aspartate drives cancer cell proliferation, but signaling pathways that rewire aspartate biosynthesis to control cell growth remain largely unknown. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF1α) can suppress tumor cell proliferation. Here, we discovered that HIF1α acts as a direct repressor of aspartate biosynthesis involving the suppression of several key aspartate-producing proteins, including cytosolic glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase-1 (GOT1) and mitochondrial GOT2. Accordingly, HIF1α suppresses aspartate production from both glutamine oxidation as well as the glutamine reductive pathway. Strikingly, the addition of aspartate to the culture medium is sufficient to relieve HIF1α-dependent repression of tumor cell proliferation. Furthermore, these key aspartate-producing players are specifically repressed in VHL-deficient human renal carcinomas, a paradigmatic tumor type in which HIF1α acts as a tumor suppressor, highlighting the in vivo relevance of these findings. In conclusion, we show that HIF1α inhibits cytosolic and mitochondrial aspartate biosynthesis and that this mechanism is the molecular basis for HIF1α tumor suppressor activity.

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