TSC/mTORC1通过中心粒蛋白M在c-MYC诱导的小鼠肝癌发生过程中介导mTORC2/AKT1信号传导。

Yi Zhou,Shu Zhang,Guoteng Qiu,Xue Wang,Andrew Yonemura,Hongwei Xu,Guofei Cui,Shanshan Deng,Joanne Chun,Nianyong Chen,Meng Xu,Xinhua Song,Jingwen Wang,Zijing Xu,Youping Deng,Matthias Evert,Diego F Calvisi,Shumei Lin,Haichuan Wang,Xin Chen
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摘要

激活的 mTORC2/AKT 信号在肝细胞癌(HCC)中发挥着作用。研究表明,TSC/mTORC1 和 FOXO1 是 AKT 信号在肝脏再生和新陈代谢中的不同下游效应器。然而,这些途径在 HCC 中介导 mTORC2/AKT 激活的机制尚未完全明了。c-MYC 的扩增和激活是 HCC 中的一个关键分子事件。在本研究中,我们探讨了 TSC/mTORC1 和 FOXO1 作为 mTORC2/AKT1 的下游效应器在 c-MYC 诱导的肝癌发生中的作用。通过在小鼠中使用各种遗传方法,我们发现操纵 FOXO 通路对 c-MYC 诱导的 HCC 影响甚微。相反,缺失 mTORC2 可抑制 c-MYC 诱导的 HCC,而通过消减 TSC2(TSC2 激活 mTORC1)可完全逆转这种影响。此外,我们还发现 p70/RPS6 和 4EBP1/eIF4E 作用于 mTORC1 下游,调节不同的分子通路。值得注意的是,在 c-MYC 诱导的 HCC 中,4EBP1/eIF4E 级联对细胞增殖和糖酵解至关重要。我们还发现中心粒蛋白M(CENPM)是TSC2/mTORC1通路在c-MYC驱动的肝癌发生中的下游靶点,消减该蛋白可完全抑制c-MYC依赖性HCC的形成。我们的研究结果表明,TSC/mTORC1/CENPM通路而非FOXO级联是调控c-MYC驱动的肝癌发生的主要信号通路。以 CENPM 为靶点具有治疗 c-MYC 驱动的 HCC 的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
TSC/mTORC1 mediates mTORC2/AKT1 signaling in c-MYC-induced murine hepatocarcinogenesis via centromere protein M.
Activated mTORC2/AKT signaling plays a role in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Research has shown that TSC/mTORC1 and FOXO1 are distinct downstream effectors of AKT signaling in liver regeneration and metabolism. However, the mechanisms by which these pathways mediate mTORC2/AKT activation in HCC are not yet fully understood. Amplification and activation of c-MYC is a key molecular event in HCC. In this study, we explored the roles of TSC/mTORC1 and FOXO1 as downstream effectors of mTORC2/AKT1 in c-MYC-induced hepatocarcinogenesis. Using various genetic approaches in mice, we found that manipulating the FOXO pathway had minimal impact on c-MYC-induced HCC. In contrast, loss of mTORC2 inhibited c-MYC-induced HCC, an effect that was completely reversed by ablating TSC2, which activated mTORC1. Additionally, we discovered that p70/RPS6 and 4EBP1/eIF4E act downstream of mTORC1, regulating distinct molecular pathways. Notably, the 4EBP1/eIF4E cascade is crucial for cell proliferation and glycolysis in c-MYC-induced HCC. We also identified centromere protein M (CENPM) as a downstream target of the TSC2/mTORC1 pathway in c-MYC-driven hepatocarcinogenesis, and its ablation entirely inhibited c-MYC-dependent HCC formation. Our findings demonstrate that the TSC/mTORC1/CENPM pathway, rather than the FOXO cascade, is the primary signaling pathway regulating c-MYC-driven hepatocarcinogenesis. Targeting CENPM holds therapeutic potential for treating c-MYC-driven HCC.
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