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Hepatic glutamine synthetase controls N 5 -methylglutamine in homeostasis and cancer.

Victor H VillarMaria Francesca AllegaRuhi S DeshmukhTobias AckermannMark A NakasoneJohan Vande VoordeThomas M DrakeJanina OetjenAlgernon BloomColin NixonMiryam MüllerStephanie MayEe Hong TanLars VereeckeMaude JansGillian BlanckeDaniel J MurphyDanny T HuangDavid Y LewisThomas G BirdOwen James SansomKaren BlythDavid SumptonSaverio Tardito
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2022)
Glutamine synthetase (GS) activity is conserved from prokaryotes to humans, where the ATP-dependent production of glutamine from glutamate and ammonia is essential for neurotransmission and ammonia detoxification. Here, we show that mammalian GS uses glutamate and methylamine to produce a methylated glutamine analog, N 5 -methylglutamine. Untargeted metabolomics revealed that liver-specific GS deletion and its pharmacological inhibition in mice suppress hepatic and circulating levels of N 5 -methylglutamine. This alternative activity of GS was confirmed in human recombinant enzyme and cells, where a pathogenic mutation in the active site (R324C) promoted the synthesis of N 5 -methylglutamine over glutamine. N 5 -Methylglutamine is detected in the circulation, and its levels are sustained by the microbiome, as demonstrated by using germ-free mice. Finally, we show that urine levels of N 5 -methylglutamine correlate with tumor burden and GS expression in a β-catenin-driven model of liver cancer, highlighting the translational potential of this uncharacterized metabolite.
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