4.8 Article

PHD3 Loss in Cancer Enables Metabolic Reliance on Fatty Acid Oxidation via Deactivation of ACC2

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 63, Issue 6, Pages 1006-1020

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2016.08.014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [P60DK020541]
  2. National Science Foundation [1000087636]
  3. NIH [T32 GM007306]
  4. NIH
  5. NIH from the NIDDK [DK103295]
  6. Ludwig Center at Harvard
  7. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  8. American Cancer Society
  9. Alexander and Margaret Stewart Trust

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While much research has examined the use of glucose and glutamine by tumor cells, many cancers instead prefer to metabolize fats. Despite the pervasiveness of this phenotype, knowledge of pathways that drive fatty acid oxidation (FAO) in cancer is limited. Prolyl hydroxylase domain proteins hydroxylate substrate proline residues and have been linked to fuel switching. Here, we reveal that PHD3 rapidly triggers repression of FAO in response to nutrient abundance via hydroxylation of acetyl-coA carboxylase 2 (ACC2). We find that PHD3 expression is strongly decreased in subsets of cancer including acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and is linked to a reliance on fat catabolism regardless of external nutrient cues. Overexpressing PHD3 limits FAO via regulation of ACC2 and consequently impedes leukemia cell proliferation. Thus, loss of PHD3 enables greater utilization of fatty acids but may also serve as a metabolic and therapeutic liability by indicating cancer cell susceptibility to FAO inhibition.

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