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NRF2 mediates melanoma addiction to GCDH by modulating apoptotic signalling

  • Sachin Verma
  • , David Crawford
  • , Ali Khateb
  • , Yongmei Feng
  • , Eduard Sergienko
  • , Gaurav Pathria
  • , Chen Ting Ma
  • , Steven H. Olson
  • , David Scott
  • , Rabi Murad
  • , Eytan Ruppin
  • , Michael Jackson
  • , Ze’ev A. Ronai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

34 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tumour dependency on specific metabolic signals has been demonstrated and often guided numerous therapeutic approaches. We identify melanoma addiction to the mitochondrial protein glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (GCDH), which functions in lysine metabolism and controls protein glutarylation. GCDH knockdown induced cell death programmes in melanoma cells, an activity blocked by inhibition of the upstream lysine catabolism enzyme DHTKD1. The transcription factor NRF2 mediates GCDH-dependent melanoma cell death programmes. Mechanistically, GCDH knockdown induces NRF2 glutarylation, increasing its stability and DNA binding activity, with a concomitant transcriptional upregulation of ATF4, ATF3, DDIT3 and CHAC1, resulting in cell death. In vivo, inducible inactivation of GCDH effectively inhibited melanoma tumour growth. Correspondingly, reduced GCDH expression correlated with improved survival of patients with melanoma. These findings identify melanoma cell addiction to GCDH, limiting apoptotic signalling by controlling NRF2 glutarylation. Inhibiting the GCDH pathway could thus represent a therapeutic approach to treat melanoma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1422-1432
Number of pages11
JournalNature Cell Biology
Volume24
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2022
Externally publishedYes

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