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Translation initiation factor eIF3a regulates glucose metabolism and cell proliferation via promoting small GTPase Rheb synthesis and AMPK activation
Authors:Shijie Ma  Zizheng Dong  Yanfei Huang  Jing-Yuan Liu  Jian-Ting Zhang
Affiliation:1.Department of Cell and Cancer Biology, University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences, Toledo, OH, USA;2.Department of Medicine, University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences, Toledo, OH, USA
Abstract:Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3 subunit A (eIF3a), the largest subunit of the eIF3 complex, has been shown to be overexpressed in malignant cancer cells, potentially making it a proto-oncogene. eIF3a overexpression can drive cancer cell proliferation but contributes to better prognosis. While its contribution to prognosis was previously shown to be due to its function in suppressing synthesis of DNA damage repair proteins, it remains unclear how eIF3a regulates cancer cell proliferation. In this study, we show using genetic approaches that eIF3a controls cell proliferation by regulating glucose metabolism via the phosphorylation and activation of AMP-activated protein kinase alpha (AMPKα) at Thr172 in its kinase activation loop. We demonstrate that eIF3a regulates AMPK activation mainly by controlling synthesis of the small GTPase Rheb, largely independent of the well-known AMPK upstream liver kinase B1 and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase 2, and also independent of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling and glucose levels. Our findings suggest that glucose metabolism in and proliferation of cancer cells may be translationally regulated via a novel eIF3a–Rheb–AMPK signaling axis.
Keywords:eIF3a   protein synthesis   Rheb   AMPK   glucose metabolism   cell proliferation
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