Serine-Dependent Sphingolipid Synthesis Is a Metabolic Liability of Aneuploid Cells

Aneuploidy disrupts cellular homeostasis. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the physiological responses and adaptation to aneuploidy are not well understood. Deciphering these mechanisms is important because aneuploidy is associated with diseases, including intellectual disability and can...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell reports (Cambridge) 2017-12, Vol.21 (13), p.3807-3818
Hauptverfasser: Hwang, Sunyoung, Gustafsson, H. Tobias, O’Sullivan, Ciara, Bisceglia, Gianna, Huang, Xinhe, Klose, Christian, Schevchenko, Andrej, Dickson, Robert C., Cavaliere, Paola, Dephoure, Noah, Torres, Eduardo M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aneuploidy disrupts cellular homeostasis. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the physiological responses and adaptation to aneuploidy are not well understood. Deciphering these mechanisms is important because aneuploidy is associated with diseases, including intellectual disability and cancer. Although tumors and mammalian aneuploid cells, including several cancer cell lines, show altered levels of sphingolipids, the role of sphingolipids in aneuploidy remains unknown. Here, we show that ceramides and long-chain bases, sphingolipid molecules that slow proliferation and promote survival, are increased by aneuploidy. Sphingolipid levels are tightly linked to serine synthesis, and inhibiting either serine or sphingolipid synthesis can specifically impair the fitness of aneuploid cells. Remarkably, the fitness of aneuploid cells improves or deteriorates upon genetically decreasing or increasing ceramides, respectively. Combined targeting of serine and sphingolipid synthesis could be exploited to specifically target cancer cells, the vast majority of which are aneuploid. [Display omitted] •Aneuploid cells rely on increased serine synthesis to proliferate•Increased serine synthesis leads to the accumulation of sphingolipids•Mutations that lower ceramide levels increase the fitness of aneuploid cells•Combined inhibition of serine and sphingolipid synthesis is lethal to aneuploid cells Hwang et al. demonstrate that aneuploid yeast cells rely on the synthesis of the amino acid serine for their viability. Serine is used for the synthesis of sphingolipids that control the fitness of aneuploid cells. Aneuploid cells are vulnerable to combined inhibition of serine and sphingolipid biosynthesis.
ISSN:2211-1247
2211-1247
DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2017.11.103