作者
Taro Hitosugi,Lu Zhou,Jun Fan,Shannon Elf,Liang Zhang,Jingui Xie,Yi Wang,Ting Gu,Maša Alečković,Gary LeRoy,Yibin Kang,Hee-Bum Kang,Jae Ho Seo,Changliang Shan,Peng Jin,Weimin Gong,Sagar Lonial,Martha Arellano,H. Jean Khoury,Georgia Z. Chen,Dong M. Shin,Fadlo R. Khuri,Titus J. Boggon,Sumin Kang,Chuan He,Jing Chen
摘要
How oncogenic signalling coordinates glycolysis and anabolic biosynthesis in cancer cells remains unclear. We recently reported that the glycolytic enzyme phosphoglycerate mutase 1 (PGAM1) regulates anabolic biosynthesis by controlling intracellular levels of its substrate 3-phosphoglycerate and product 2-phosphoglycerate. Here we report a novel mechanism in which Y26 phosphorylation enhances PGAM1 activation through release of inhibitory E19 that blocks the active site, stabilising cofactor 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate binding and H11 phosphorylation. We also report the crystal structure of H11-phosphorylated PGAM1 and find that phospho-H11 activates PGAM1 at least in part by promoting substrate 3-phosphoglycerate binding. Moreover, Y26 phosphorylation of PGAM1 is common in human cancer cells and contributes to regulation of 3-phosphoglycerate and 2-phosphoglycerate levels, promoting cancer cell proliferation and tumour growth. As PGAM1 is a negative transcriptional target of TP53, and is therefore commonly upregulated in human cancers, these findings suggest that Y26 phosphorylation represents an additional acute mechanism underlying phosphoglycerate mutase 1 upregulation. Tumour cells may undergo a dramatic metabolic shift in which glycolysis is favoured despite the presence of oxygen. By solving its crystal structure, Hitosugi et al. reveal how phosphorylation of the enzyme phosphoglycerate mutase 1 regulates glycolytic flux in cancer cells.