Nur77 suppresses hepatocellular carcinoma via switching glucose metabolism toward gluconeogenesis through attenuating phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase sumoylation

  • Xue Li Bian
  • , Hang Zi Chen
  • , Peng Bo Yang
  • , Ying Ping Li
  • , Fen Na Zhang
  • , Jia Yuan Zhang
  • , Wei Jia Wang
  • , Wen Xiu Zhao
  • , Sheng Zhang
  • , Qi Tao Chen
  • , Yu Zheng
  • , Xiao Yu Sun
  • , Xiao Min Wang
  • , Kun Yi Chien
  • , Qiao Wu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

122 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gluconeogenesis, an essential metabolic process for hepatocytes, is downregulated in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Here we show that the nuclear receptor Nur77 is a tumour suppressor for HCC that regulates gluconeogenesis. Low Nur77 expression in clinical HCC samples correlates with poor prognosis, and a Nur77 deficiency in mice promotes HCC development. Nur77 interacts with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK1), the rate-limiting enzyme in gluconeogenesis, to increase gluconeogenesis and suppress glycolysis, resulting in ATP depletion and cell growth arrest. However, PEPCK1 becomes labile after sumoylation and is degraded via ubiquitination, which is augmented by the p300 acetylation of ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme 9 (Ubc9). Although Nur77 attenuates sumoylation and stabilizes PEPCK1 via impairing p300 activity and preventing the Ubc9-PEPCK1 interaction, Nur77 is silenced in HCC samples due to Snail-mediated DNA methylation of the Nur77 promoter. Our study reveals a unique mechanism to suppress HCC by switching from glycolysis to gluconeogenesis through Nur77 antagonism of PEPCK1 degradation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number14420
JournalNature Communications
Volume8
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 02 2017

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Japan Antibiotics Research Association All rights reserved.

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