| Literature DB >> 34907345 |
Luis Coronel1, David Häckes1, Katjana Schwab1, Konstantin Riege1, Steve Hoffmann2, Martin Fischer3.
Abstract
In recent years the tumor suppressor p53 has been increasingly recognized as a potent regulator of the cell metabolism and for its ability to inhibit the critical pro-survival kinases AKT and mTOR. The mechanisms through which p53 controls AKT and mTOR, however, are largely unclear. Here, we demonstrate that p53 activates the metabolic regulator DDIT4 indirectly through the regulatory factor X 7 (RFX7). We provide evidence that DDIT4 is required for p53 to inhibit mTOR complex 2 (mTORC2)-dependent AKT activation. Most strikingly, we also find that the DDIT4 regulator RFX7 is required for p53-mediated inhibition of mTORC1 and AKT. Our results suggest that AMPK activation plays no role and p53-mediated AKT inhibition is not critical for p53-mediated mTORC1 inhibition. Moreover, using recently developed physiological cell culture media we uncover that basal p53 and RFX7 activity can play a critical role in restricting mTORC1 activity under physiological nutrient conditions, and we propose a nutrient-dependent model for p53-RFX7-mediated mTORC1 inhibition. These results establish RFX7 and its downstream target DDIT4 as essential effectors in metabolic control elicited by p53.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34907345 PMCID: PMC8837532 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-02147-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867
Fig. 1RFX7 mediates DDIT4 up-regulation by p53 and stress.
A Genome browser snapshot of the DDIT4 gene locus. Upper black tracks display publicly available p53 binding signals from Nutlin-3a-treated U2OS [40] and HCT116 [39] cells. Gray and orange tracks display RFX7 binding signals from respective dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and Nutlin-3a-treated U2OS, HCT116, and RPE-1 cells [31]. B ChIP-qPCR of p53 and RFX7 binding to GAPDH (negative control), MDM2 (p53 positive control), and DDIT4 from U2OS cells treated with 10 µM Nutlin-3a or DMSO solvent control. Mean and standard deviation is displayed. Statistical significance obtained through a two-sided unpaired t-test, n = 3 technical replicates. C RT-qPCR data of DDIT4 and RFX7 in 10 µM Nutlin-3a and DMSO control-treated U2OS cells transfected with two different control siRNAs (siCtrl) and two different siRNAs against RFX7. Normalized to siControl#1 DMSO and ACTR10 control gene. Mean and standard deviation is displayed. Statistical significance obtained through a two-sided unpaired t-test, n = 9 replicates (three biological with three technical each). D Western blot analysis of RFX7, DDIT4, p53, and actin (loading control) levels in U2OS, HCT116, and RPE-1 cells transfected with siControl, siRFX7, or siTP53 and treated with DMSO solvent control, 10 µM Nutlin-3a (N3A), 5 nM Actinomycin D (AD), and 1 µM Doxorubicin (Dox).
Fig. 2p53 inhibits AKT and mTOR through DDIT4 and RFX7.
A–C Western blot analysis of U2OS and RPE-1 cells transfected with indicated siRNAs and treated with 10 µM Nutlin-3a or DMSO control. Actin served as loading control. Densitometric quantification relative to siControl DMSO samples and actin levels. D Critical nodes in p53-dependend AKT and mTORC1 control. Blue nodes are direct p53 target genes in human. Black edges indicate activation or inhibition. Green and orange nodes are established activators and inhibitors of mTORC1, respectively, irrespective of p53. Saturated blue and orange nodes (RFX7 and DDIT4) were assessed for their p53-dependent mTORC1 control in this study. p53 appears to inhibit mTORC2-AKT signaling through RFX7-DDIT4. RFX7 is required for p53-mediated AKT and mTORC1 inhibition. RFX7 employs yet unknown targets to inhibit mTORC1 (indicated by a question mark).
Fig. 3Nutrient-dependent inhibition of mTORC1 by p53 and RFX7.
Western blot analysis of U2OS cells transfected with indicated siRNAs, treated with 10 µM Nutlin-3a or DMSO control, and cultured in DMEM and (A) HPLM or (C) DMEMphysio. A complementary replicate of (A) with additional measurements is available through Supplementary Fig. 1. B Western blot analysis of RPE-1 and HCTT116 cells transfected with indicated siRNAs, treated with 10 µM Nutlin-3a or DMSO control, and cultured in HPLM. Densitometric quantification relative to siControl DMSO samples and actin levels. D Nutrient-dependent phase model of p53-RFX7-mediated mTORC1 inhibition. The low mTORC1 activity we observed in U2OS cells cultured with physiological nutrient access likely resembles rather normal/medium activity levels, whereas the elevated mTORC1 activity in cells cultured with excess nutrients reflects high or hyper-activity. Both p53 and RFX7 are required to balance mTORC1 activity. Uninduced p53 and RFX7 are required to limit mTORC1 activity under physiological nutrient abundance, but are insufficient to keep high or hyper-activated mTORC1 in check. The activation of p53-RFX7 signaling enables p53 and RFX7 to reduce the activity of hyper-active mTORC1.