scholarly journals Phosphoglycerate Mutase Cooperates with Chk1 Kinase to Regulate Glycolysis

iScience ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 101306
Author(s):  
Takumi Mikawa ◽  
Eri Shibata ◽  
Midori Shimada ◽  
Ken Ito ◽  
Tomiko Ito ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii18-ii19
Author(s):  
Charles Day ◽  
Alyssa Langfald ◽  
Florina Grigore ◽  
Leslie Sepaniac ◽  
Jason Stumpff ◽  
...  

Abstract Pediatric midline gliomas – including DIPG – are lethal brain tumors in children, with poor prognosis and limited treatment options that provide only short-term benefits. The majority have a lysine-to-methionine substitution at residue 27 (H3K27M) in genes expressing histone H3 – predominantly in the H3.3 variant. This causes a global reduction in H3 Lys27 tri-methylation (H3K27Me3), comprehensive epigenetic reprogramming, and is a key driver in gliomagenesis. We show that the H3.3K27M mutation also induces chromosome segregation defects, which in high-grade tumors, results in extensive copy number alterations (CNAs). Ser31 is one of five amino acid substitutions differentiating H3.3 from canonical H3.1. Mitotic phosphorylation of H3.3 Ser31 by Chk1 kinase is restricted to pericentromeric heterochromatin, where it plays a role in chromosome segregation. We show that the K27M mutation affects neighboring Ser31 phosphorylation and pericentromeric heterochromatin organization. We demonstrate that (i) H3.3 K27M protein is defective for Ser31 phosphorylation by Chk1 kinase in vitro; (ii) DIPG cell lines have significantly decreased mitotic Ser31 phosphorylation, and are chromosomally unstable; and (iii) CRISPR-reversion of H3.3K27M to Lys27 restores phospho-Ser31 (and Lys27 tri-methylation) and significantly decreases chromosome instability. Expression of H3.3K27M or non-phosphorylatable H3.3S31A mutants in WT cells results in chromosome missegregation; this is suppressed by co-expression of phospho-mimetic H3.3K27M/S31E. In normal cells, chromosome missegregation stimulates p53-dependent cell cycle arrest in G1 to prevent the proliferation of aneuploid daughters. However, cells expressing H3.3 K27M or S31A failed to arrest following missegregation - despite having WT p53. Finally, in a novel mouse model of glioma, mean survival of mice with tumors induced with H3.3K27M and H3.3S31A was 81 and 68 days: 100% of H3.3S31A mice developed high-grade tumors. H3.3 WT controls developed only low-grade tumors and all survived 100 days. H3.3S31A is WT for Lys27 tri-methylation and thus, loss of Ser31 phosphorylation alone is oncogenic.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anushree Bachhar ◽  
Jiri Jablonsky

AbstractPhosphoketolase (PKET) pathway is predominant in cyanobacteria (around 98%) but current opinion is that it is virtually inactive under autotrophic ambient CO2 condition (AC-auto). This creates an evolutionary paradox due to the existence of PKET pathway in obligatory photoautotrophs. We aim to answer the paradox with the aid of bioinformatic analysis along with metabolic, transcriptomic, fluxomic and mutant data integrated into a multi-level kinetic model. We discussed the problems linked to neglected isozyme, pket2 (sll0529) and inconsistencies towards the explanation of residual flux via PKET pathway in the case of silenced pket1 (slr0453) in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Our in silico analysis showed: (1) 17% flux reduction via RuBisCO for Δpket1 under AC-auto, (2) 11.2–14.3% growth decrease for Δpket2 in turbulent AC-auto, and (3) flux via PKET pathway reaching up to 252% of the flux via phosphoglycerate mutase under AC-auto. All results imply that PKET pathway plays a crucial role under AC-auto by mitigating the decarboxylation occurring in OPP pathway and conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA linked to EMP glycolysis under the carbon scarce environment. Finally, our model predicted that PKETs have low affinity to S7P as a substrate.


2019 ◽  
Vol 476 (4) ◽  
pp. 629-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle Gerin ◽  
Marina Bury ◽  
Francesca Baldin ◽  
Julie Graff ◽  
Emile Van Schaftingen ◽  
...  

Abstract Repair of a certain type of oxidative DNA damage leads to the release of phosphoglycolate, which is an inhibitor of triose phosphate isomerase and is predicted to indirectly inhibit phosphoglycerate mutase activity. Thus, we hypothesized that phosphoglycolate might play a role in a metabolic DNA damage response. Here, we determined how phosphoglycolate is formed in cells, elucidated its effects on cellular metabolism and tested whether DNA damage repair might release sufficient phosphoglycolate to provoke metabolic effects. Phosphoglycolate concentrations were below 5 µM in wild-type U2OS and HCT116 cells and remained unchanged when we inactivated phosphoglycolate phosphatase (PGP), the enzyme that is believed to dephosphorylate phosphoglycolate. Treatment of PGP knockout cell lines with glycolate caused an up to 500-fold increase in phosphoglycolate concentrations, which resulted largely from a side activity of pyruvate kinase. This increase was much higher than in glycolate-treated wild-type cells and was accompanied by metabolite changes consistent with an inhibition of phosphoglycerate mutase, most likely due to the removal of the priming phosphorylation of this enzyme. Surprisingly, we found that phosphoglycolate also inhibits succinate dehydrogenase with a Ki value of <10 µM. Thus, phosphoglycolate can lead to profound metabolic disturbances. In contrast, phosphoglycolate concentrations were not significantly changed when we treated PGP knockout cells with Bleomycin or ionizing radiation, which are known to lead to the release of phosphoglycolate by causing DNA damage. Thus, phosphoglycolate concentrations due to DNA damage are too low to cause major metabolic changes in HCT116 and U2OS cells.


The structure of yeast phosphoglycerate mutase determined by X-ray crystallographic and amino acid sequence studies has been interpreted in terms of the chemical, kinetic and mechanistic observations made on this enzyme. There are two histidine residues at the active site, with imidazole groups almost parallel to each other and approximately 0.4 nm apart, positioned close to the 2 and 3 positions of the substrate. The simplest interpretation of the available information suggests that a ping-pong type mechanism operates in which at least one of these histidine residues participates in the phosphoryl transfer reaction. The flexible C-terminal region also plays an important role in the enzymic reaction.


1999 ◽  
Vol 289 (4) ◽  
pp. 691-699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Rigden ◽  
Rebecca A. Walter ◽  
Simon E.V. Phillips ◽  
Linda A. Fothergill-Gilmore

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