Acetyl-CoA promotes glioblastoma cell adhesion and migration through Ca2+–NFAT signaling

JV Lee, CT Berry, K Kim, P Sen, T Kim… - Genes & …, 2018 - genesdev.cshlp.org
JV Lee, CT Berry, K Kim, P Sen, T Kim, A Carrer, S Trefely, S Zhao, S Fernandez, LE Barney…
Genes & development, 2018genesdev.cshlp.org
The metabolite acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) is the required acetyl donor for lysine
acetylation and thereby links metabolism, signaling, and epigenetics. Nutrient availability
alters acetyl-CoA levels in cancer cells, correlating with changes in global histone
acetylation and gene expression. However, the specific molecular mechanisms through
which acetyl-CoA production impacts gene expression and its functional roles in promoting
malignant phenotypes are poorly understood. Here, using histone H3 Lys27 acetylation …
Abstract
The metabolite acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) is the required acetyl donor for lysine acetylation and thereby links metabolism, signaling, and epigenetics. Nutrient availability alters acetyl-CoA levels in cancer cells, correlating with changes in global histone acetylation and gene expression. However, the specific molecular mechanisms through which acetyl-CoA production impacts gene expression and its functional roles in promoting malignant phenotypes are poorly understood. Here, using histone H3 Lys27 acetylation (H3K27ac) ChIP-seq (chromatin immunoprecipitation [ChIP] coupled with next-generation sequencing) with normalization to an exogenous reference genome (ChIP-Rx), we found that changes in acetyl-CoA abundance trigger site-specific regulation of H3K27ac, correlating with gene expression as opposed to uniformly modulating this mark at all genes. Genes involved in integrin signaling and cell adhesion were identified as acetyl-CoA-responsive in glioblastoma cells, and we demonstrate that ATP citrate lyase (ACLY)-dependent acetyl-CoA production promotes cell migration and adhesion to the extracellular matrix. Mechanistically, the transcription factor NFAT1 (nuclear factor of activated T cells 1) was found to mediate acetyl-CoA-dependent gene regulation and cell adhesion. This occurs through modulation of Ca 2+ signals, triggering NFAT1 nuclear translocation when acetyl-CoA is abundant. The findings of this study thus establish that acetyl-CoA impacts H3K27ac at specific loci, correlating with gene expression, and that expression of cell adhesion genes are driven by acetyl-CoA in part through activation of Ca 2+–NFAT signaling.
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