Post-transcriptional Regulation of De Novo Lipogenesis by mTORC1-S6K1-SRPK2 Signaling.
| Citation | Lee, Gina, et al. “Post-Transcriptional Regulation of De Novo Lipogenesis by MTORC1-S6K1-SRPK2 Signaling”. 2017. Cell, vol. 171, no. 7, 2017, pp. 1545–1558.e18. |
| Center | Joslin Diabetes Center |
| Author | Gina Lee, Yuxiang Zheng, Sungyun Cho, Cholsoon Jang, Christina England, Jamie M Dempsey, Yonghao Yu, Xiaolei Liu, Long He, Paola M Cavaliere, Andre Chavez, Erik Zhang, Meltem Isik, Anthony Couvillon, Noah E Dephoure, Keith Blackwell, Jane J Yu, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Lewis C Cantley, John Blenis |
| Keywords | CK1, RNA splicing, RNA stability, S6K1, SR proteins, SRPK2, cancer metabolism, de novo lipid synthesis, mTOR, nonsense-mediated decay |
| Abstract |
mTORC1 is a signal integrator and master regulator of cellular anabolic processes linked to cell growth and survival. Here, we demonstrate that mTORC1 promotes lipid biogenesis via SRPK2, a key regulator of RNA-binding SR proteins. mTORC1-activated S6K1 phosphorylates SRPK2 at Ser494, which primes Ser497 phosphorylation by CK1. These phosphorylation events promote SRPK2 nuclear translocation and phosphorylation of SR proteins. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis reveals that lipid biosynthetic enzymes are among the downstream targets of mTORC1-SRPK2 signaling. Mechanistically, SRPK2 promotes SR protein binding to U1-70K to induce splicing of lipogenic pre-mRNAs. Inhibition of this signaling pathway leads to intron retention of lipogenic genes, which triggers nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of SRPK2 blunts de novo lipid synthesis, thereby suppressing cell growth. These results thus reveal a novel role of mTORC1-SRPK2 signaling in post-transcriptional regulation of lipid metabolism and demonstrate that SRPK2 is a potential therapeutic target for mTORC1-driven metabolic disorders. |
| Year of Publication |
2017
|
| Journal |
Cell
|
| Volume |
171
|
| Issue |
7
|
| Number of Pages |
1545-1558.e18
|
| Date Published |
12/2017
|
| ISSN Number |
1097-4172
|
| DOI |
10.1016/j.cell.2017.10.037
|
| Alternate Journal |
Cell
|
| PMCID |
PMC5920692
|
| PMID |
29153836
|
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