4.8 Article

Filamentous GLS1 promotes ROS-induced apoptosis upon glutamine deprivation via insufficient asparagine synthesis

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 82, Issue 10, Pages 1821-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2022.03.016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31701252, U21A20373, 31801183, U1705287, 91857102]
  2. Funda-mental Research Funds for the Central Universities [20720200103]
  3. Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Cellular Stress Biology, Xia-men University [SKLCSB2020KF002, SKLCSB2019KF005]

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GLS1 promotes cell proliferation when glutamine is abundant, but facilitates apoptosis when glutamine is deprived. Under glutamine deprivation, GLS1 forms filamentous polymers with enhanced catalytic activity, depleting intracellular glutamine.
GLS1 orchestrates glutaminolysis and promotes cell proliferation when glutamine is abundant by regenerating TCA cycle intermediates and supporting redox homeostasis. CB-839, an inhibitor of GLS1, is currently under clinical investigation for a variety of cancer types. Here, we show that GLS1 facilitates apoptosis when glutamine is deprived. Mechanistically, the absence of exogenous glutamine sufficiently reduces glutamate levels to convert dimeric GLS1 to a self-assembled, extremely low-K-m filamentous polymer. GLS1 filaments possess an enhanced catalytic activity, which further depletes intracellular glutamine. Functionally, filamentous GLS1-dependent glutamine scarcity leads to inadequate synthesis of asparagine and mitogenome-encoded proteins, resulting in ROS-induced apoptosis that can be rescued by asparagine supplementation. Physiologically, we observed GLS1 filaments in solid tumors and validated the tumor-suppressive role of constitutively active, filamentous GLS1 mutants K320A and S482C in xenograft models. Our results change our understanding of GLS1 in cancer metabolism and suggest the therapeutic potential of promoting GLS1 filament formation.

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