Oxidative phosphorylation induces de novo expression of the MHC class I in tumor cells through the ERK5 pathway

Most cancer cells use anaerobic-like glycolysis to generate energy instead of oxidative phosphorylation. They also avoid recognition by CTLs, which occurs primarily through decreasing the level of MHC class I (MHC-I) at the cell surface. We find that the two phenomena are linked; culture conditions...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 2010-09, Vol.185 (6), p.3498-3503
Hauptverfasser: Charni, Seyma, de Bettignies, Geoffroy, Rathore, Moeez G, Aguiló, Juan I, van den Elsen, Peter J, Haouzi, Delphine, Hipskind, Robert A, Enriquez, José Antonio, Sanchez-Beato, Margarita, Pardo, Julián, Anel, Alberto, Villalba, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most cancer cells use anaerobic-like glycolysis to generate energy instead of oxidative phosphorylation. They also avoid recognition by CTLs, which occurs primarily through decreasing the level of MHC class I (MHC-I) at the cell surface. We find that the two phenomena are linked; culture conditions that force respiration in leukemia cells upregulate MHC-I transcription and protein levels at the cell surface, whereas these decrease in cells forced to perform fermentation as well as in leukemia cells lacking a functional mitochondrial respiratory chain. Forced respiration leads to increased expression of the MAPK ERK5, which activates MHC-I gene promoters, and ERK5 accumulation in mitochondria. Respiration-induced MHC-I upregulation is reversed upon short hairpin RNA-mediated ERK5 downregulation and by inactive mutants of ERK5. Moreover, short hairpin RNA for ERK5 leukemia cells do not tolerate forced respiration. Thus, the expression of ERK5 and MHC-I is linked to cell metabolism and notably diminished by the metabolic adaptations found in tumor cells.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.1001250