4.8 Article

Long-chain fatty acyl coenzyme A inhibits NME1/2 and regulates cancer metastasis

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2117013119

Keywords

long-chain fatty acyl coenzyme A; fatty acid; tumor metastasis; NME1; NME2

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R35GM131808]

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This study reveals that the metabolic intermediate LCFA-CoA regulates cancer metastasis by inhibiting NME1 and NME2, which play important roles in cellular protein functions such as clathrin-mediated endocytosis and cancer cell migration. The inhibitory effect of LCFA-CoA on NME1 compromises its metastasis suppressor function, especially under high-fat-diet conditions.
Fatty acid metabolism has well-established connections to cancer progression and metastasis. However, whether the metabolic intermediates of fatty acid metabolism regulate this process through protein-metabolite interactions remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated whether long-chain fatty acyl coenzyme A (LCFACoA), an important metabolic intermediate involved in fatty acid metabolism, could regulate cellular protein functions to affect cancer. We used a quantitative chemical proteomic approach to identify proteins that could be regulated by LCFA-CoA. This strategy identified NME1 and NME2 as potential targets regulated by LCFA-CoA. In vitro, LCFA-CoA potently inhibited NME1/2. In cells, LCFA-CoA inhibited clathrin-mediated endocytosis and cancer cell migration, processes regulated by NME1/2. In vivo, NME1, a known metastasis suppressor, is inhibited by LCFA-CoA, and its metastasis suppressor function is compromised in mouse models of breast cancer specifically under high-fat-diet conditions. Thus, inhibition of NME1 by LCFA-CoA provides a molecular mechanism linking fatty acid metabolism and cancer metastasis, demonstrating the power of the chemical proteomic approach for discovering regulatory roles of metabolites.

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