Ruiting Lin
Emory University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruiting Lin.
Molecular Cell | 2011
Lei Lv; Dong Li; Di Zhao; Ruiting Lin; Yajing Chu; Heng Zhang; Zhengyu Zha; Ying Liu; Zi Li; Yanping Xu; Gang Wang; Yiran Huang; Yue Xiong; Kun-Liang Guan; Qun Ying Lei
Most tumor cells take up more glucose than normal cells but metabolize glucose via glycolysis even in the presence of normal levels of oxygen, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. Tumor cells commonly express the embryonic M2 isoform of pyruvate kinase (PKM2) that may contribute to the metabolism shift from oxidative phosphorylation to aerobic glycolysis and tumorigenesis. Here we show that PKM2 is acetylated on lysine 305 and that this acetylation is stimulated by high glucose concentration. PKM2 K305 acetylation decreases PKM2 enzyme activity and promotes its lysosomal-dependent degradation via chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA). Acetylation increases PKM2 interaction with HSC70, a chaperone for CMA, and association with lysosomes. Ectopic expression of an acetylation mimetic K305Q mutant accumulates glycolytic intermediates and promotes cell proliferation and tumor growth. These results reveal an acetylation regulation of pyruvate kinase and the link between lysine acetylation and CMA.
Molecular Cell | 2013
Ruiting Lin; Ren Tao; Xue Gao; Tingting Li; Xin Zhou; Kun-Liang Guan; Yue Xiong; Qun Ying Lei
Increased fatty acid synthesis is required to meet the demand for membrane expansion of rapidly growing cells. ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY) is upregulated or activated in several types of cancer, and inhibition of ACLY arrests proliferation of cancer cells. Here we show that ACLY is acetylated at lysine residues 540, 546, and 554 (3K). Acetylation at these three lysine residues is stimulated by P300/calcium-binding protein (CBP)-associated factor (PCAF) acetyltransferase under high glucose and increases ACLY stability by blocking its ubiquitylation and degradation. Conversely, the protein deacetylase sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) deacetylates and destabilizes ACLY. Substitution of 3K abolishes ACLY ubiquitylation and promotes de novo lipid synthesis, cell proliferation, and tumor growth. Importantly, 3K acetylation of ACLY is increased in human lung cancers. Our study reveals a crosstalk between acetylation and ubiquitylation by competing for the same lysine residues in the regulation of fatty acid synthesis and cell growth in response to glucose.
Nature Cell Biology | 2015
Ruiting Lin; Shannon Elf; Changliang Shan; Hee Bum Kang; Quanjiang Ji; Lu Zhou; Taro Hitosugi; Liang Zhang; Shuai Zhang; Jae Ho Seo; Jianxin Xie; Meghan Tucker; Ting Lei Gu; Jessica Sudderth; Lei Jiang; Matthew A. Mitsche; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Shaoxiong Wu; Hui Mao; Peng Chen; Dongsheng Wang; Georgia Zhuo Chen; Selwyn J. Hurwitz; Sagar Lonial; Martha Arellano; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri; Benjamin H. Lee; Qun Ying Lei; Daniel J. Brat
The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) contributes to tumour growth, but the precise contribution of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD), the third enzyme in this pathway, to tumorigenesis remains unclear. We found that suppression of 6PGD decreased lipogenesis and RNA biosynthesis and elevated ROS levels in cancer cells, attenuating cell proliferation and tumour growth. 6PGD-mediated production of ribulose-5-phosphate (Ru-5-P) inhibits AMPK activation by disrupting the active LKB1 complex, thereby activating acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 and lipogenesis. Ru-5-P and NADPH are thought to be precursors in RNA biosynthesis and lipogenesis, respectively; thus, our findings provide an additional link between the oxidative PPP and lipogenesis through Ru-5-P-dependent inhibition of LKB1–AMPK signalling. Moreover, we identified and developed 6PGD inhibitors, physcion and its derivative S3, that effectively inhibited 6PGD, cancer cell proliferation and tumour growth in nude mice xenografts without obvious toxicity, suggesting that 6PGD could be an anticancer target.
Nature Chemistry | 2015
Jing Wang; Cheng Luo; Changliang Shan; Qiancheng You; J. Lu; Shannon Elf; Yu Zhou; Yi Wen; Jan L. Vinkenborg; Jun Fan; Hee-Bum Kang; Ruiting Lin; Dali Han; Yuxin Xie; Jason Karpus; Shijie Chen; Shisheng Ouyang; Chi Hao Luan; Naixia Zhang; Hong Ding; Maarten Merkx; Hong Liu; Jing Chen; Hualiang Jiang; Chuan He
Copper is a transition metal that plays critical roles in many life processes. Controlling the cellular concentration and trafficking of copper offers a route to disrupt these processes. Here we report small molecules that inhibit the human copper-trafficking proteins Atox1 and CCS, and so provide a selective approach to disrupt cellular copper transport. The knockdown of Atox1 and CCS or their inhibition leads to a significantly reduced proliferation of cancer cells, but not of normal cells, as well as to attenuated tumour growth in mouse models. We show that blocking copper trafficking induces cellular oxidative stress and reduces levels of cellular ATP. The reduced level of ATP results in activation of the AMP-activated protein kinase that leads to reduced lipogenesis. Both effects contribute to the inhibition of cancer cell proliferation. Our results establish copper chaperones as new targets for future developments in anticancer therapies.
Molecular Cell | 2014
Changliang Shan; Shannon Elf; Quanjiang Ji; Hee Bum Kang; Lu Zhou; Taro Hitosugi; Lingtao Jin; Ruiting Lin; Liang Zhang; Jae Ho Seo; Jianxin Xie; Meghan Tucker; Ting Lei Gu; Jessica Sudderth; Lei Jiang; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Shaoxiong Wu; Hui Mao; Peng Chen; Dongsheng Wang; GeorgiaZhuo Chen; Sagar Lonial; Martha Arellano; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri; Benjamin H. Lee; Daniel J. Brat; Keqiang Ye; Titus J. Boggon; Chuan He
Although the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway is important for tumor growth, how 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD) in this pathway is upregulated in human cancers is unknown. We found that 6PGD is commonly activated in EGF-stimulated cells and human cancer cells by lysine acetylation. Acetylation at K76 and K294 of 6PGD promotes NADP(+) binding to 6PGD and formation of active 6PGD dimers, respectively. Moreover, we identified DLAT and ACAT2 as upstream acetyltransferases of K76 and K294, respectively, and HDAC4 as the deacetylase of both sites. Expressing acetyl-deficient mutants of 6PGD in cancer cells significantly attenuated cell proliferation and tumor growth. This is due in part to reduced levels of 6PGD products ribulose-5-phosphate and NADPH, which led to reduced RNA and lipid biosynthesis as well as elevated ROS. Furthermore, 6PGD activity is upregulated with increased lysine acetylation in primary leukemia cells from human patients, providing mechanistic insights into 6PGD upregulation in cancer cells.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Jun Fan; Hee-Bum Kang; Changliang Shan; Shannon Elf; Ruiting Lin; Jianxin Xie; Ting-Lei Gu; Mike Aguiar; Scott Lonning; Tae-Wook Chung; Martha Arellano; Hanna Jean Khoury; Dong M. Shin; Fadlo R. Khuri; Titus J. Boggon; Sumin Kang; Jing Chen
Background: Current understanding of mitochondrial PDH inhibition involves Ser-293 phosphorylation that impedes active site accessibility. Results: Tyr-301 phosphorylation also inhibits PDHA1, likely by blocking pyruvate binding, which is important for the glycolytic switch and tumor growth. Conclusion: Tyrosine phosphorylation may function to regulate PDH activity. Significance: These data provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying PDC regulation and the Warburg effect. The mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) plays a crucial role in regulation of glucose homoeostasis in mammalian cells. PDC flux depends on catalytic activity of the most important enzyme component pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). PDH kinase inactivates PDC by phosphorylating PDH at specific serine residues, including Ser-293, whereas dephosphorylation of PDH by PDH phosphatase restores PDC activity. The current understanding suggests that Ser-293 phosphorylation of PDH impedes active site accessibility to its substrate pyruvate. Here, we report that phosphorylation of a tyrosine residue Tyr-301 also inhibits PDH α 1 (PDHA1) by blocking pyruvate binding through a novel mechanism in addition to Ser-293 phosphorylation. In addition, we found that multiple oncogenic tyrosine kinases directly phosphorylate PDHA1 at Tyr-301, and Tyr-301 phosphorylation of PDHA1 is common in EGF-stimulated cells as well as diverse human cancer cells and primary leukemia cells from human patients. Moreover, expression of a phosphorylation-deficient PDHA1 Y301F mutant in cancer cells resulted in increased oxidative phosphorylation, decreased cell proliferation under hypoxia, and reduced tumor growth in mice. Together, our findings suggest that phosphorylation at distinct serine and tyrosine residues inhibits PDHA1 through distinct mechanisms to impact active site accessibility, which act in concert to regulate PDC activity and promote the Warburg effect.
Oncogene | 2017
Shannon Elf; Ruiting Lin; Siyuan Xia; Yaozhu Pan; Changliang Shan; Shaoxiong Wu; Sagar Lonial; Manila Gaddh; Martha Arellano; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri; Benjamin H. Lee; Titus J. Boggon; Jun Fan; Jing Chen
The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) is crucial for cancer cell metabolism and tumor growth. We recently reported that targeting a key oxidative PPP enzyme, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD), using our novel small-molecule 6PGD inhibitors Physcion and its derivative S3, shows anticancer effects. Notably, humans with genetic deficiency of either 6PGD or another oxidative PPP enzyme, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, exhibit non-immune hemolytic anemia upon exposure to aspirin and various antimalarial drugs. Inspired by these clinical observations, we examined the anticancer potential of combined treatment with 6PGD inhibitors and antimalarial drugs. We found that stable knockdown of 6PGD sensitizes leukemia cells to antimalarial agent dihydroartemisinin (DHA). Combined treatment with DHA and Physcion activates AMP-activated protein kinase, leading to synergistic inhibition of human leukemia cell viability. Moreover, our combined therapy synergistically attenuates tumor growth in xenograft nude mice injected with human K562 leukemia cells and cell viability of primary leukemia cells from human patients, but shows minimal toxicity to normal hematopoietic cells in mice as well as red blood cells and mononucleocytes from healthy human donors. Our findings reveal the potential for combined therapy using optimized doses of Physcion and DHA as a novel antileukemia treatment without inducing hemolysis.
Cancer Cell | 2018
Lingtao Jin; Jaemoo Chun; Chaoyun Pan; Dan Li; Ruiting Lin; Gina N. Alesi; Xu Wang; Hee-Bum Kang; Lina Song; Dongsheng Wang; Guojing Zhang; Jun Fan; Titus J. Boggon; Lu Zhou; Jeanne Kowalski; Cheng Kui Qu; Conor E. Steuer; Georgia Z. Chen; Nabil F. Saba; Lawrence H. Boise; Taofeek K. Owonikoko; Fadlo R. Khuri; Kelly R. Magliocca; Dong M. Shin; Sagar Lonial; Sumin Kang
Platinum-based chemotherapeutics represent a mainstay of cancer therapy, but resistance limits their curative potential. Through a kinome RNAi screen, we identified microtubule-associated serine/threonine kinase 1 (MAST1) as a main driver of cisplatin resistance in human cancers. Mechanistically, cisplatin but no other DNA-damaging agents inhibit the MAPK pathway by dissociating cRaf from MEK1, while MAST1 replaces cRaf to reactivate the MAPK pathway in a cRaf-independent manner. We show clinical evidence that expression of MAST1, both initial and cisplatin-induced, contributes to platinum resistance and worse clinical outcome. Targeting MAST1 with lestaurtinib, a recently identified MAST1 inhibitor, restores cisplatin sensitivity, leading to the synergistic attenuation of cancer cell proliferation and tumor growth in human cancer cells and patient-derived xenograft models.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017
Liang Zhao; Jun Fan; Siyuan Xia; Yaozhu Pan; Shuangping Liu; Guoqing Qian; Zhiyu Qian; Hee-Bum Kang; Jack L. Arbiser; Brian P. Pollack; Ragini R. Kudchadkar; David H. Lawson; Michael R. Rossi; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Taha Merghoub; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri; Lawrence H. Boise; Sagar Lonial; Fangping Chen; Jing Chen; Ruiting Lin
Contributions of metabolic changes to cancer development and maintenance have received increasing attention in recent years. Although many human cancers share similar metabolic alterations, it remains unclear whether oncogene-specific metabolic alterations are required for tumor development. Using an RNAi-based screen targeting the majority of the known metabolic proteins, we recently found that oncogenic BRAFV600E up-regulates HMG-CoA lyase (HMGCL), which converts HMG-CoA to acetyl-CoA and a ketone body, acetoacetate, that selectively enhances BRAFV600E-dependent MEK1 activation in human cancer. Here, we identified HMG-CoA synthase 1 (HMGCS1), the upstream ketogenic enzyme of HMGCL, as an additional “synthetic lethal” partner of BRAFV600E. Although HMGCS1 expression did not correlate with BRAFV600E mutation in human melanoma cells, HMGCS1 was selectively important for proliferation of BRAFV600E-positive melanoma and colon cancer cells but not control cells harboring active N/KRAS mutants, and stable knockdown of HMGCS1 only attenuated colony formation and tumor growth potential of BRAFV600E melanoma cells. Moreover, cytosolic HMGCS1 that co-localized with HMGCL and BRAFV600E was more important than the mitochondrial HMGCS2 isoform in BRAFV600E-expressing cancer cells in terms of acetoacetate production. Interestingly, HMGCL knockdown did not affect HMGCS1 expression levels, whereas HMGCS1 knockdown caused a compensating increase in HMGCL protein level because of attenuated protein degradation. However, this increase did not reverse the reduced ketogenesis in HMGCS1 knockdown cells. Mechanistically, HMGCS1 inhibition decreased intracellular acetoacetate levels, leading to reduced BRAFV600E-MEK1 binding and consequent MEK1 activation. We conclude that the ketogenic HMGCS1-HMGCL-acetoacetate axis may represent a promising therapeutic target for managing BRAFV600E-positive human cancers.
Molecular Cell | 2015
Hee Bum Kang; Jun Fan; Ruiting Lin; Shannon Elf; Quanjiang Ji; Liang Zhao; Lingtao Jin; Jae Ho Seo; Changliang Shan; Jack L. Arbiser; Cynthia Cohen; Daniel J. Brat; Henry M. Miziorko; Eunhee Kim; Omar Abdel-Wahab; Taha Merghoub; Stefan Fröhling; Claudia Scholl; Pablo Tamayo; David A. Barbie; Lu Zhou; Brian P. Pollack; Kevin E. Fisher; Ragini R. Kudchadkar; David H. Lawson; Gabriel Sica; Michael R. Rossi; Sagar Lonial; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri