4.7 Article

Inhibiting neddylation modification alters mitochondrial morphology and reprograms energy metabolism in cancer cells

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.121582

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key RAMP
  2. D Program of China [2016YFA0501800]
  3. Chinese NSFC [31701167, 81572718]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LY17C070001]
  5. Zhejiang Medical Technology and Education [2017180631, 2018249124]
  6. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2018FZA7005]
  7. NCI [CA156744, CA171277]
  8. K.C. Wong Education Fund

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Abnormal activation of neddylation modification and dysregulated energy metabolism are frequently seen in many types of cancer cells. Whether and how neddylation modification affects cellular metabolism remains largely unknown. Here, we showed that MLN4924, a small-molecule inhibitor of neddylation modification, induces mitochondrial fission-to-fusion conversion in breast cancer cells via inhibiting ubiquitylation and degradation of fusion-promoting protein mitofusin 1 (MFN1) by SCF beta-TrCP E3 ligase and blocking the mitochondrial translocation of fusion-inhibiting protein DRP1. Importantly, MLN4924-induced mitochondrial fusion is independent of cell cycle progression, but confers cellular survival. Mass-spectrometry-based metabolic profiling and mitochondrial functional assays reveal that MLN4924 inhibits the TCA cycle but promotes mitochondrial OXPHOS. MLN4924 also increases glycolysis by activating PKM2 via promoting its tetramerization. Biologically, MLN4924 coupled with the OXPHOS inhibitor metformin, or the glycolysis inhibitor shikonin, significantly inhibits cancer cell growth both in vitro and in vivo. Together, our study links neddylation modification and energy metabolism, and provides sound strategies for effective combined cancer therapies.

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