Simian Virus 40 Small T Antigen Activates AMPK and Triggers Autophagy To Protect Cancer Cells from Nutrient Deprivation |
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Authors: | Sravanth Hindupur Kumar Annapoorni Rangarajan |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular Reproduction, Development, and Genetics, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560012, India |
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Abstract: | As tumors grow larger, they often experience an insufficient supply of oxygen and nutrients. Hence, cancer cells must develop mechanisms to overcome these stresses. Using an in vitro transformation model where the presence of the simian virus 40 (SV40) small T (ST) antigen has been shown to be critical for tumorigenic transformation, we investigated whether the ST antigen has a role to play in regulating the energy homeostasis of cancer cells. We find that cells expressing the SV40 ST antigen (+ST cells) are more resistant to glucose deprivation-induced cell death than cells lacking the SV40 ST antigen (−ST cells). Mechanistically, we find that the ST antigen mediates this effect by activating a nutrient-sensing kinase, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). The basal level of active, phosphorylated AMPK was higher in +ST cells than in −ST cells, and these levels increased further in response to glucose deprivation. Additionally, inhibition of AMPK in +ST cells increased the rate of cell death, while activation of AMPK in −ST cells decreased the rate of cell death, under conditions of glucose deprivation. We further show that AMPK mediates its effects, at least in part, by inhibiting mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin), thereby shutting down protein translation. Finally, we show that +ST cells exhibit a higher percentage of autophagy than −ST cells upon glucose deprivation. Thus, we demonstrate a novel role for the SV40 ST antigen in cancers, where it functions to maintain energy homeostasis during glucose deprivation by activating AMPK, inhibiting mTOR, and inducing autophagy as an alternate energy source.The localization of most mammalian cells within a 100- to 150-μm distance from blood vessels ensures a continuous supply of oxygen and nutrients, a prerequisite for cell survival. However, tumors often grow beyond this limit, thereby experiencing oxygen and nutrient deprivation (28). Tumors overcome this barrier by initiating neoangiogenesis, a process that supplies new blood vessels (44). However, before neoangiogenesis can set in, incipient tumors must survive the stresses of nutrient deprivation. Therefore, an understanding of the molecular mechanisms that regulate cancer cell survival under conditions of nutrient deprivation is fundamental in cancer biology. Additionally, targeting the ability of cancer cells to survive under nutrient-deprived conditions can be exploited for designing novel cancer therapeutics.Glucose is the major source of energy for mammalian cells. Several types of cancer cells exhibit marked resistance to cell death upon glucose deprivation (22). In this study we have attempted to delineate the mechanisms that allow cancer cells to survive under conditions of glucose deprivation by using human foreskin fibroblasts that have been transformed by the serial introduction of the simian virus 40 (SV40) early region (coding for the large T [LT] and small T [ST] antigens), the catalytic subunit of human telomerase (hTERT), and an oncogenic allele of H-Ras (H-Ras V12) (referred to below as +ST cells) (32). In this model, human cells lacking the ST antigen but expressing the rest of these genetic elements (referred to below as −ST cells) are nontumorigenic (16, 32), highlighting the importance of the ST antigen in human cell transformation. However, little is known about the specific cellular functions moderated by the ST antigen that aid in transformation (3).Since glucose is the major source of energy for mammalian cells, and cancer cells experience glucose deprivation when they are beyond the diffusion limit, we investigated whether the ST antigen has any role to play under conditions of glucose deprivation. We report here a novel link between the ST antigen and AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activation that enables cancer cell survival under glucose deprivation via inhibition of protein synthesis and activation of autophagy as an alternate energy source. |
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