4.7 Article

GCN2 adapts protein synthesis to scavenging-dependent growth

Journal

CELL SYSTEMS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages 158-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cels.2021.09.014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [DP1 AI124669, P1 DK113643, R01 CA163591, F31 CA186513, R35GM128813, T32GM007388, R01 DK109714]
  2. Stand Up To Cancer [SU2C-AACR-DT2016]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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This study investigated the mechanism by which pancreatic cancer cells grow by scavenging extracellular proteins and identified key genes required for this process. The most important gene identified was GCN2, which regulates protein synthesis by preventing ribosome stalling. These findings provide potential therapeutic targets for pancreatic cancer treatment.
Pancreatic cancer cells with limited access to free amino acids can grow by scavenging extracellular protein. In a murine model of pancreatic cancer, we performed a genome-wide CRISPR screen for genes required for scavenging-dependent growth. The screen identified key mediators of macropinocytosis, peripheral lysosome positioning, endosome-lysosome fusion, lysosomal protein catabolism, and translational control. The top hit was GCN2, a kinase that suppresses translation initiation upon amino acid depletion. Using isotope tracers, we show that GCN2 is not required for protein scavenging. Instead, GCN2 prevents ribosome stalling but without slowing protein synthesis; cells still use all of the limiting amino acids as they emerge from lysosomes. GCN2 also adapts gene expression to the nutrient-poor environment, reorienting protein synthesis away from ribosomes and toward lysosomal hydrolases, such as cathepsin L. GCN2, cathepsin L, and the other genes identified in the screen are potential therapeutic targets in pancreatic cancer.

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