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GTP signaling links metabolism, DNA repair, and responses to genotoxic stress.

Weihua ZhouZitong ZhaoAngelica LinJohn Z YangJie XuKari Wilder-RomansAnnabel YangJing LiSumeet SolankiJennifer M SpethNatalie WalkerAndrew J ScottLu WangBo WenAnthony AndrenLi ZhangAyesha U KothariYangyang YaoErik R PetersonNavyateja KorimerlaChristian K WernerAlexander UllrichJessica LiangJanna JacobsonSravya PalavalasaAlexandra M O'BrienAmeer L ElaimySean P FerrisShuang G ZhaoJann N SarkariaGyorffy BalazsShuqun ZhangWajd N Al-HolouYoshie UmemuraMeredith A MorganTheodore S LawrenceCostas Andreas LyssiotisMarc Peters-GoldenYatrik M ShahDaniel R Wahl
Published in: Cancer discovery (2023)
How cell metabolism regulates DNA repair is incompletely understood. Here, we define a GTP-mediated signaling cascade that links metabolism to DNA repair and has significant therapeutic implications. GTP, but not other nucleotides, regulates the activity of Rac1, a guanine nucleotide-binding protein, that promotes the dephosphorylation of serine 323 on Abl-interactor 1 (Abi-1) by protein phosphatase 5 (PP5). Dephosphorylated Abi-1, a protein previously not known to activate DNA repair, promotes non-homologous end joining. In patients and mouse models of glioblastoma, Rac1 and dephosphorylated Abi-1 mediate DNA repair and resistance to standard of care genotoxic treatments. The GTP-Rac1-PP5-Abi-1 signaling axis is not limited to brain cancer, as GTP supplementation promotes DNA repair and Abi-1-S323 dephosphorylation in non-malignant cells and protects mouse tissues from genotoxic insult. This unexpected ability of GTP to regulate DNA repair independently of deoxynucleotide pools has important implications for normal physiology and cancer treatment.
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