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Aurora-A mediated phosphorylation of LDHB promotes glycolysis and tumor progression by relieving the substrate-inhibition effect.

Aoxing ChengPeng ZhangBo WangDongdong YangXiaotao DuanYongliang JiangTian XuYa JiangJiahui ShiChengtao DingGao WuZhihong SangQiang WuHua WangMian WuZhiyong ZhangXin PanYue-Yin PanPing GaoHuafeng ZhangCong-Zhao ZhouJing GuoJing-Bo Yang
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Overexpressed Aurora-A kinase promotes tumor growth through various pathways, but whether Aurora-A is also involved in metabolic reprogramming-mediated cancer progression remains unknown. Here, we report that Aurora-A directly interacts with and phosphorylates lactate dehydrogenase B (LDHB), a subunit of the tetrameric enzyme LDH that catalyzes the interconversion between pyruvate and lactate. Aurora-A-mediated phosphorylation of LDHB serine 162 significantly increases its activity in reducing pyruvate to lactate, which efficiently promotes NAD+ regeneration, glycolytic flux, lactate production and bio-synthesis with glycolytic intermediates. Mechanistically, LDHB serine 162 phosphorylation relieves its substrate inhibition effect by pyruvate, resulting in remarkable elevation in the conversions of pyruvate and NADH to lactate and NAD+. Blocking S162 phosphorylation by expression of a LDHB-S162A mutant inhibited glycolysis and tumor growth in cancer cells and xenograft models. This study uncovers a function of Aurora-A in glycolytic modulation and a mechanism through which LDHB directly contributes to the Warburg effect.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • poor prognosis
  • stem cells
  • binding protein
  • childhood cancer