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Glutamine-utilizing transaminases are a metabolic vulnerability of TAZ/YAP-activated cancer cells.


ABSTRACT: The transcriptional regulators TAZ and YAP (TAZ/YAP) have emerged as pro-tumorigenic factors that drive many oncogenic traits, including induction of cell growth, resistance to cell death, and activation of processes that promote migration and invasion. Here, we report that TAZ/YAP reprogram cellular energetics to promote the dependence of breast cancer cell growth on exogenous glutamine. Rescue experiments with glutamine-derived metabolites suggest an essential role for glutamate and ?-ketoglutarate (AKG) in TAZ/YAP-driven cell growth in the absence of glutamine. Analysis of enzymes that mediate the conversion of glutamate to AKG shows that TAZ/YAP induce glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT1) and phosphoserine aminotransferase (PSAT1) expression and that TAZ/YAP activity positively correlates with transaminase expression in breast cancer patients. Notably, we find that the transaminase inhibitor aminooxyacetate (AOA) represses cell growth in a TAZ/YAP-dependent manner, identifying transamination as a potential vulnerable metabolic requirement for TAZ/YAP-driven breast cancer.

SUBMITTER: Yang CS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5989844 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Glutamine-utilizing transaminases are a metabolic vulnerability of TAZ/YAP-activated cancer cells.

Yang Chih-Sheng CS   Stampouloglou Eleni E   Kingston Nathan M NM   Zhang Liye L   Monti Stefano S   Varelas Xaralabos X  

EMBO reports 20180416 6


The transcriptional regulators TAZ and YAP (TAZ/YAP) have emerged as pro-tumorigenic factors that drive many oncogenic traits, including induction of cell growth, resistance to cell death, and activation of processes that promote migration and invasion. Here, we report that TAZ/YAP reprogram cellular energetics to promote the dependence of breast cancer cell growth on exogenous glutamine. Rescue experiments with glutamine-derived metabolites suggest an essential role for glutamate and α-ketoglut  ...[more]

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