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Translatome analysis reveals altered serine and glycine metabolism in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells.

Kim R Kampen ,
Laura Fancello ,
Tiziana Girardi ,
Gianmarco Rinaldi ,
Mélanie Planque ,
Sergey O Sulima ,
Fabricio Loayza-Puch ,
Benno Verbelen ,
Stijn Vereecke ,
Jelle Verbeeck ,
Joyce Op de Beeck ,
Jonathan Royaert ,
Pieter Vermeersch ,
David Cassiman ,
Jan Cools ,
Reuven Agami ,
Mark Fiers ,
Sarah-Maria Fendt ,
Kim De Keersmaecker

Abstract

Somatic ribosomal protein mutations have recently been described in cancer, yet their impact on cellular transcription and translation remains poorly understood. Here, we integrate mRNA sequencing, ribosome footprinting, polysomal RNA sequencing and mass spectrometry datasets from a mouse lymphoid cell model to characterize the T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) associated ribosomal RPL10 R98S mutation. Surprisingly, RPL10 R98S induces changes in protein levels primarily through transcriptional rather than translation efficiency changes. Phosphoserine phosphatase (PSPH), encoding a key serine biosynthesis enzyme, was the only gene with elevated transcription and translation leading to protein overexpression. PSPH upregulation is a general phenomenon in T-ALL patient samples, associated with elevated serine and glycine levels in xenograft mice. Reduction of PSPH expression suppresses proliferation of T-ALL cell lines and their capacity to expand in mice. We identify ribosomal mutation driven induction of serine biosynthesis and provide evidence supporting dependence of T-ALL cells on PSPH.

More about this publication

Nature communications

Volume 10
Issue nr. 1
Pages 2542
Publication date 11-06-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41467-019-10508-2
Europe PubMed Central 31186416
Pubmed 31186416

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