Li Hongde, Chawla Geetanjali, Hurlburt Alexander J, Sterrett Maria C, Zaslaver Olga, Cox James, Karty Jonathan A, Rosebrock Adam P, Caudy Amy A, Tennessen Jason M
Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405.
Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 3E1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Feb 7;114(6):1353-1358. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1614102114. Epub 2017 Jan 23.
L-2-hydroxyglutarate (L-2HG) has emerged as a putative oncometabolite that is capable of inhibiting enzymes involved in metabolism, chromatin modification, and cell differentiation. However, despite the ability of L-2HG to interfere with a broad range of cellular processes, this molecule is often characterized as a metabolic waste product. Here, we demonstrate that Drosophila larvae use the metabolic conditions established by aerobic glycolysis to both synthesize and accumulate high concentrations of L-2HG during normal developmental growth. A majority of the larval L-2HG pool is derived from glucose and dependent on the Drosophila estrogen-related receptor (dERR), which promotes L-2HG synthesis by up-regulating expression of the Drosophila homolog of lactate dehydrogenase (dLdh). We also show that dLDH is both necessary and sufficient for directly synthesizing L-2HG and the Drosophila homolog of L-2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase (dL2HGDH), which encodes the enzyme that breaks down L-2HG, is required for stage-specific degradation of the L-2HG pool. In addition, dLDH also indirectly promotes L-2HG accumulation via synthesis of lactate, which activates a metabolic feed-forward mechanism that inhibits dL2HGDH activity and stabilizes L-2HG levels. Finally, we use a genetic approach to demonstrate that dLDH and L-2HG influence position effect variegation and DNA methylation, suggesting that this compound serves to coordinate glycolytic flux with epigenetic modifications. Overall, our studies demonstrate that growing animal tissues synthesize L-2HG in a controlled manner, reveal a mechanism that coordinates glucose catabolism with L-2HG synthesis, and establish the fly as a unique model system for studying the endogenous functions of L-2HG during cell growth and proliferation.
L-2-羟基戊二酸(L-2HG)已成为一种公认的肿瘤代谢物,能够抑制参与代谢、染色质修饰和细胞分化的酶。然而,尽管L-2HG能够干扰广泛的细胞过程,但该分子通常被认为是一种代谢废物。在此,我们证明果蝇幼虫在正常发育生长过程中利用有氧糖酵解建立的代谢条件来合成和积累高浓度的L-2HG。幼虫体内大部分的L-2HG库来源于葡萄糖,并依赖果蝇雌激素相关受体(dERR),该受体通过上调乳酸脱氢酶果蝇同源物(dLdh)的表达来促进L-2HG的合成。我们还表明,dLDH对于直接合成L-2HG既必要又充分,而编码分解L-2HG的酶的L-2-羟基戊二酸脱氢酶果蝇同源物(dL2HGDH)则是L-2HG库阶段特异性降解所必需的。此外,dLDH还通过乳酸的合成间接促进L-2HG的积累,乳酸激活了一种代谢前馈机制,抑制dL2HGDH的活性并稳定L-2HG水平。最后,我们采用遗传学方法证明dLDH和L-2HG影响位置效应斑驳和DNA甲基化,表明该化合物有助于协调糖酵解通量与表观遗传修饰。总体而言,我们的研究表明生长中的动物组织以可控方式合成L-2HG,揭示了一种协调葡萄糖分解代谢与L-2HG合成的机制,并将果蝇确立为研究L-2HG在细胞生长和增殖过程中内源性功能的独特模型系统。