SAMMSON fosters cancer cell fitness by concertedly enhancing mitochondrial and cytosolic translation.
Roberto VendraminYvessa VerheydenHideaki IshikawaLucas GoedertEmilien NicolasKritika SarafAlexandros ArmaosRiccardo Delli PontiKeichi IzumikawaPieter MestdaghDenis L J LafontaineGian Gaetano TartagliaNobuhiro TakahashiJean-Christophe MarineEleonora LeucciPublished in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2018)
Synchronization of mitochondrial and cytoplasmic translation rates is critical for the maintenance of cellular fitness, with cancer cells being especially vulnerable to translational uncoupling. Although alterations of cytosolic protein synthesis are common in human cancer, compensating mechanisms in mitochondrial translation remain elusive. Here we show that the malignant long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) SAMMSON promotes a balanced increase in ribosomal RNA (rRNA) maturation and protein synthesis in the cytosol and mitochondria by modulating the localization of CARF, an RNA-binding protein that sequesters the exo-ribonuclease XRN2 in the nucleoplasm, which under normal circumstances limits nucleolar rRNA maturation. SAMMSON interferes with XRN2 binding to CARF in the nucleus by favoring the formation of an aberrant cytoplasmic RNA-protein complex containing CARF and p32, a mitochondrial protein required for the processing of the mitochondrial rRNAs. These data highlight how a single oncogenic lncRNA can simultaneously modulate RNA-protein complex formation in two distinct cellular compartments to promote cell growth.
Keyphrases
- long non coding rna
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- endothelial cells
- physical activity
- body composition
- amino acid
- nucleic acid
- cell death
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- squamous cell carcinoma
- signaling pathway
- big data
- deep learning
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- small molecule
- pluripotent stem cells