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Metabolic Regulation of the Epitranscriptome Justin M. Thomas, Pedro J. Batista, and Jordan L. Meier ACS Chem. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.8b00951 • Publication Date (Web): 17 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 20, 2019
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Metabolic Regulation of the Epitranscriptome
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Justin M. Thomas[a], Pedro J. Batista*[b] and Jordan L. Meier*[a]
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[a]Chemical
6
[b]Laboratory
Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, Frederick MD, 21702, USA.. of Cell Biology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda MD, 20892, USA..
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*Email:
[email protected],
[email protected] 9 10
Keywords
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Oncometabolite: Metabolites whose abnormal accumulation causes altered signaling that can
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lead to cellular transformation and malignancy.
13 14
Epitranscriptome: Shorthand used to refer to RNA modifications, by analogy with epigenome.
15 16
Cofactor competition: Mechanism of metabolic regulation whereby an endogenous metabolite
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competes with substrate for enzyme active site occupancy, similar to a synthetic inhibitor.
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Cofactor depletion: Mechanism of metabolic regulation whereby depletion of a critical enzyme
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cofactor (e.g. SAM) reduces the activity of enzymes with high Michaelis constant (Km) for that
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cofactor.
22 23
Metabolic regulation of writer localization: Mechanism of metabolic regulation whereby
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cofactor concentrations may affect affinity and interaction of epitransciptomic writers with RNA
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substrates.
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Abstract:
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An emergent theme in cancer biology is that dysregulated energy metabolism may directly
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influence oncogenic gene expression. This is due to the fact that many enzymes involved in gene
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regulation use utilize cofactors derived from primary metabolism, including acetyl-CoA, S-
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adenosylmethionine, and 2-ketoglutarate. While this phenomenon was first studied through the
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prism of histone and DNA modifications (the epigenome), recent work indicates metabolism can
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also impact gene regulation by disrupting the balance of RNA post-transcriptional modifications
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(the epitranscriptome). Here we review recent studies that explore how the metabolic regulation
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of writers and erasers of the epitranscriptome (FTO, TET2, NAT10, MTO1, METTL16) helps
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shape gene expression through three distinct mechanisms: cofactor inhibition, cofactor depletion,
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and writer localization. Our brief survey underscores similarities and differences between the
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metabolic regulation of the epigenome and epitranscriptome, and highlights fertile ground for
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future investigation.
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Introduction
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The ability of metabolism to influence gene regulatory mechanisms in human cells is an
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increasingly well-established phenomenon. While canonical metabolic sensors such as growth
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factor receptors and nutrient-sensitive kinases have been known for decades, a more recent
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finding is that metabolites may play a direct role in transcriptional regulation by influencing
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chromatin structure in the nucleus. Early studies in this area demonstrated that disruption of
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acetyl-CoA metabolism can inhibit histone acetylation, implying that under certain conditions
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acetyl-CoA becomes rate-limiting for histone acetyltransferases.1-2 These findings were
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remarkable, as they suggested the enzymatic that add (“writers”) and remove (“erasers”) of
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histone modifications (many of which use primary metabolites as cofactors) may serve as a link
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between environmental cues and powerful epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation in
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eukaryotes. This concept of ‘metabolic regulation of epigenetics,’ as well examples of its
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relevance to physiology and disease, has been summarized excellently elsewhere.3-5
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Five years ago in ACS Chemical Biology, we reviewed three mechanisms by which
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metabolites had been found to directly impact the activity of enzymes involved in epigenetic
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signaling: 1) competitive inhibition, 2) cofactor depletion, and 3) localized enzymatic effects.6
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Intriguingly, these metabolic mechanisms are not necessarily limited to enzymes involved in DNA
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and histone modifications but may also encompass other classes of cofactor-utilizing enzymes
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that play a signaling role in cancer, including the writers and erasers of RNA modifications. The
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ability of RNA to function as a direct sensor of metabolic information is well-precedented in
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bacteria, where riboswitches drive nutrient-dependent gene expression programs.7 Related is the
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fact that over 100 modified nucleobases exist in human coding and non-coding RNA and, just like
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histone modifications, many of these modifications are derived from primary metabolic cofactors.
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Similarly, just as histone modifications are associated with changes in gene transcription, RNA
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modifications can alter gene expression via diverse mechanisms.8-10 The importance of these
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mechanisms is highlighted by the critical roles described for RNA modification in both
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development and in disease.11 In this perspective we summarize recent efforts to understand the
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metabolic regulation of RNA modifications, also known as the epitranscriptome. Rather than
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providing a comprehensive review of the metabolic regulation of RNA modifications, this article
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aims to focus attention on a few contemporary examples of studies of metabolically-sensitive
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writer and eraser enzymes as case studies for defining this phenomenon. In addition to reviewing
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these critical studies, our brief survey highlights similarities and differences between the metabolic
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regulation of the epigenome and epitranscriptome, and suggests future areas for further
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exploration.
73 74
Metabolic Regulation of the Epitranscriptome by Competitive Inhibition (FTO, TET2,
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NAT10)
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The most disease-relevant mechanism by which metabolism has been shown to directly influence
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protein and nucleic acid modifications is via the production of competitive metabolites. The
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hallmark example of this was found in 2008, when large-scale glioblastoma and acute myeloid
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leukemia genome sequencing efforts identified driver mutations in the active-sites of the primary
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metabolic enzymes isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH1/IDH2).12-14 Mechanistic studies
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revealed these genetic lesions cause formation of heterodimeric IDH enzymes imbued with novel
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ability to transform 2-ketoglutarate into (R)-2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG).15 (R)-2-HG accumulates
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to millimolar levels in tumors and patient tissues, allowing it to competitively inhibit Fe(II)--
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ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase enzymes involved in control of histone demethylation, and
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DNA hydroxymethylation.16-17 The ability to promote malignant transformation by influencing gene
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regulatory mechanisms has led (R)-2-HG to be termed an “oncometabolite.”
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In contrast to their ability to trigger cancer initiation, an increasingly appreciated
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paradoxical property of oncometabolites is their ability to exert deleterious effects on mature tumor
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progression. This is exemplified by the finding that IDH mutant glioblastomas are associated with
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a longer median overall survival than other variants of the disease,18-19 and that high levels of (R)-
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2-HG can inhibit cell growth and confer collateral inhibitor vulnerabilities across a number of cell
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types.20-22 However, it is relatively unknown how specific dioxygenases communicate information
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about (R)-2-HG levels to gene expression programs involved in regulation of cell growth. Su and
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coworkers examined the effects of (R)-2-HG on the enzyme FTO, an Fe(II)--ketoglutarate
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dioxygenase which catalyzes the removal of N6-methyladenosine (m6A) and N6,2’-O-
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dimethyladenosine (m6Am) from RNA.23-25 Careful analysis of gene expression data found that
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sensitivity to (R)-2-HG correlated with high expression of FTO. This led the authors to hypothesize
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these cell lines may be addicted to active FTO-dependent m6A demethylation, which preliminary
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data from an earlier study had suggested.26 Consistent with this hypothesis, treatment of AML cell
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lines with (R)-2-HG led to an increase overall m6A levels. (R)-2-HG also caused an increase in
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the proteolytic and thermal stability of FTO, providing additional support for ligand occupancy and
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a direct oncometabolite-FTO interaction.27-28 Transcriptome-wide mapping of m6A sites found (R)-
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2-HG treatment increased the methylation of 5’-untranslated regions (5’-UTRs) and coding
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sequences of many transcripts, including the master oncogenic transcription factor Myc.
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Expression of a synthetic gene construct incorporating the Myc 5’-UTR was activated by FTO
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overexpression and inhibited by (R)-2-HG treatment. These and additional experiments support
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an overall model in which competitive inhibition of FTO by (R)-2-HG increases levels of m6A in
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the Myc 5’-UTR, accelerating decay of Myc mRNA and limiting pro-growth gene expression
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programs (Figure 1). (R)-2-HG also increased m6A -dependent decay of CEBPA, a transcription
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factor necessary for FTO expression, providing an additional mechanism that amplifies
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oncometabolite-dependent m6A disequilibrium.
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These findings have several implications for the biology of IDH mutant cancers. First, they
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suggest that disruption of the FTO/ m6A/Myc axis may be an important contributor to the improved
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prognosis observed in cancer harboring driver mutations in IDH enzymes. Since this initial study
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focused on examining the response of m6A to (R)-2-HG levels raised by dosing or ectopic
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expression of IDH mutants, it will be important to determine whether m6A equilibrium is similarly
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altered in AML clinical specimens harboring neomorphic IDH mutations. Furthermore, the finding
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that (R)-2-HG antagonizes an m6A demethylation program required for optimal cell growth
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suggests inhibition of FTO may be a viable therapeutic strategy in IDH mutant cancers. FTO has
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recently been found to play an oncogenic role in a variety of mutationally-defined AMLs, and it is
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tempting to speculate that the partial inhibition of FTO caused by (R)-2-HG accumulation may
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render IDH mutant cancers especially sensitive to small molecule FTO inhibitors.29 Related to this
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thought, the finding that after malignant transformation (R)-2-HG production actually limits cell
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growth suggests in some contexts these cancers may be better treated by targeting collateral
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vulnerabilities30 (such as FTO), rather than directly targeting production of (R)-2-HG itself using
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inhibitors of mutant IDH.31-32 Future work will be required to test this hypothesis, as well as to
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assess how m6A levels correlate with clinical response. Another question raised by these studies
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is whether modulation of m6A may play a role in gene regulation in other settings marked by (R)-
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2-HG accumulation. In addition to other IDH mutant cancers,33 elevated (R)-2-HG levels have
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been observed in the absence of IDH mutation, and hpoxia has been found to increase levels of
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(S)-2-HG.34-35 It is likely that examination of m6A and m6Am in these diverse settings will yield
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additional insights into the metabolic regulation of RNA modifications and their role in malignancy.
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Extending our analogy, in the metabolic regulation of epigenetic signaling, cofactor
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competitive metabolites have been found to alter the activity of many different classes of
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chromatin-modifying enzymes.36 Similarly, early evidence suggests these active-site dependent
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mechanisms may also apply to several classes of RNA modifiers. The TET proteins are Fe(II)--
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ketoglutarate-dependent enzymes that oxidize 5-methylcytidine to 5-hydroxymethylcytidine
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(hm5C) in DNA and RNA.37-38 (R)-2-HG has been validated as a competitive inhibitor of TET2,39
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and TET2 and IDH mutations are mutually exclusive in AML,40 suggesting they carry out
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redundant functions. A recent study found that ectopic overexpression of neomorphic IDH1 and
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IDH2 mutants altered the ability of TET2 to catalyze formation of hm5C in RNA.41 Coupled with
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recent evidence that intragenic hm5C is present in mRNA and can functionally alter translation,42
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these findings suggest decreased levels of hm5C in RNA may contribute to gene expression
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changes in IDH mutant AML.
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Projecting beyond 2-HG, many methyltransferases have been found to be sensitive to S-
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adenosylmethionine (SAM)-competitive metabolites such as S-methylthioadenosine (MTA),
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which accumulates in methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTAP)-deficient cancers.43 It is
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plausible that elevated levels of MTA may also alter the activity of RNA methyltransferase
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enzymes, which are responsible for >40 eukaryotic RNA modifications that have been postulated
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to be derived from SAM. Recently an acetylated nucleobase, N4-acetylcytidine (ac4C), was found
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to occur in human transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomal RNA (rRNA).44-45 Our group applied an
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unbiased chemical proteomic approach46 to discover that NAT10, the enzyme responsible for
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ac4C deposition, binds tightly to the metabolic feedback inhibitor CoA.47 This suggests NAT10
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may be sensitive to the cellular acetyl-CoA/CoA ratio, which is known to be decreased by fasting
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and bioenergetic stress.1-2 Consistent with this hypothesis, one group has reported that disruption
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of acetyl-CoA biosynthesis reduces levels of ac4C in yeast,48 while another has found that
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starvation of C. elegans inhibits ac4C levels in tRNA.49 Although a definitive role for ac4C in gene
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regulation awaits determination, this modification is highly conserved and has been implicated in
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control of tRNA stability, rRNA biogenesis, and mRNA stability.45, 50-51 Intriguingly, the activity of
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NAT10 has also been implicated in premature aging syndromes.52 Given the well-characterized
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links between metabolism, histone acetylation, and aging,53-54 the development of new methods
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to study RNA acetylation55-56 may help determine whether this modification also play a role in the
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gene regulatory response to stimuli such as caloric restriction and Warburg metabolism.
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Metabolic Regulation of the Epitranscriptome by Cofactor Depletion (MTO1, GTPBP3)
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A second way in which metabolism can influence the activity of cofactor-utilizing enzymes is via
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cofactor depletion.6 In this mechanism, depletion of a critical metabolic cofactor (e.g. SAM)
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reduces the activity of enzymes possess a high Michaelis constant (Km) for that cofactor.
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Despite much study, it remains undetermined whether cofactor depletion alone can cause rate-
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limiting decreases in the activity of enzymes that utilize SAM, 2-ketoglutarate, and acetyl-CoA,
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or whether these activity changes are reliant on coincidental increases in competitive
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metabolites such as SAH, 2-HG, and CoA (described above). However, a recent study by
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Morscher and coworkers suggests that cofactor depletion can powerfully repress the activity of
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RNA-modifying enzymes responsible for synthesis of the tRNA modification 5-
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taurinomethyluridine (τm5U).57 These studies were spurred by the curious observation that
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cellular knockout of SHMT2, but not other folate one-carbon (1C) biosynthetic enzymes,
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enhanced extracellular acidification of colon cancer cell grown in culture. SHMT2 plays a critical
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role in folate 1C metabolism by mediating the serine-dependent transformation of THF to
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methylene-THF in the mitochondria.58 Hypothesizing that the observed increase in glycolysis
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could be due to impaired mitochondrial function, Morscher et al. used a variety of functional
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assays to determine that deletion of SHMT2 impairs cellular respiration by decreasing the
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abundance of the complex I, IV, and V subunits of the mitochondrial electron transport chain.
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Careful metabolic detective work and feeding studies further revealed methylene-THF as the
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key metabolite whose depletion by SHMT2 knockout was responsible for respiratory chain
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deficiency. After ruling out mechanisms such as mitochondrial DNA damage, the authors next
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considered the possibility that SHMT2/methylene-THF depletion may specifically inhibit
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translation in the mitochondria.
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Mitochondria contain localized ribosomes and tRNAs that are responsible for the
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translation of 13 proteins in humans, including several enzymes in complex I, IV, and V of the
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electron transport chain.59 To test the hypothesis that methylene-THF may be required for
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protein translation in this organelle, a mitochondria-specific ribosome profiling method was
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developed. The deep coverage and high resolution afforded by this method revealed that
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SHMT2 knockout decreased levels of actively translating ribosomes at mRNAs encoding
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several subunits of the respiratory complex, in part due to a high rate of stalled ribosomes at the
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aminoacyl-tRNA acceptor site of specific lysine and leucine codons (LysAAG and LeuUUG).57 No
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stalling was observed at LysAAA and LeuUUA codons, suggesting that SHMT2 deficiency causes
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cells difficulty reading the 3’ guanosine of certain codons. In humans, decoding of codons
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ending in A/G in split codon boxes is facilitated by modifications of the tRNA anticodon which
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allow non-Watson-Crick base-pairing with the codon 3’ base. Within mitochondria this is
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accomplished by tRNA wobble base modifications derived from 1C metabolism, including 5’-
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taurinomethyluridine (τm5U). To determine whether τm5U may be sensitive to mitochondrial
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methylene-THF levels, the authors assessed this modification by LC-MS and found that τm5U
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and its 2-thio derivative were depleted to undetectable levels in SHMT2 knockout cell lines. This
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reduction was not due to reduced taurine in these cell lines and could be rescued by re-
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expression of wild-type SHMT2 or administration of the methylene-THF precursor sarcosine.
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Isotopic labeling experiments revealed the metabolic source of the τm5U methyl group was
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methylene-THF rather than SAM, denoting τm5U as the first macromolecular modification
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directly derived from folate in mammals. MTO1 is a member of the enzyme complex responsible
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for formation of τm5U in human mitochondrial tRNAs. Consistent with the hypothesis that
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methylene-THF can become rate-limiting for τm5U deposition, knockout of the τm5U biosynthetic
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enzyme MTO1 increased occupancy at the same 3’-guanosine-containing codons affected by
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SHMT2 depletion. In addition, evidence suggests disrupted folate 1C metabolism may inhibit
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τm5U -mediated translation of respiratory chain proteins in several additional contexts, including
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mitochondrial disorders, neonatal folate deficiency, and the therapeutic administration of
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antifolates to treat immune disorders and cancer.57 Valuably, parallel investigations of τm5U in
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mitochondrial disease made similar findings regarding its regulation by folate metabolism and
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dietary taurine, providing additional perspective and validation.60-61
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The discovery of a mitochondrial translational program regulated by 1C metabolism
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raises several questions for the field. First, what is the molecular basis for the sensitivity of the
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τm5U modification to folate metabolism? In this regard it is noteworthy that 5-formylcytidine
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(f5C), a 1C metabolism-derived RNA modification found at the 5’-anticodon of mitochondrial
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tRNAMet, was unaffected by SHMT2 ablation.41 This suggests that metabolic cofactor depletion
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can selectively impact the activity of a subset of RNA-modifying enzymes, a concept similar to
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the spectrum of metabolic sensitivity displayed by chromatin-modifying enzymes such as
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histone acetyltransferases. In the case of τm5U and f5C, this selectivity may stem from a
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different range of cellular metabolite concentrations attained their 1C metabolite cofactors
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(methylene-THF and SAM), differential enzyme kinetic parameters such as cofactor Km, or
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some combination thereof. Further biochemical and metabolomic analyses will likely be
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informative in this regard. An additional question raised by these studies is whether metabolic
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mechanisms regulate codon-specific translation via RNA modifications in other contexts. As the
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role of tRNA modifications in the cellular stress response has been detailed elsewhere,10, 62-63
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we limit ourselves here to one potentially informative example. In yeast, levels of sulfur-
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containing amino acids modulate levels of 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine (mcm5s2U), a
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modified nucleobase found at the 5’-anticodon (wobble base) of several cytosolic tRNAs.64 65-67
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While nutrient-sensitive mcm5s2U deposition has not yet been reported in humans, it is known
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that altered levels of the enzymes which synthesize this modification can alter gene expression
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through codon-biased translation in neurodegenerative diseases as well as cancer.65, 68 In the
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future it will be interesting to assess whether mcm5s2U is dysregulated in cancer contexts that
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are highly dependent on cysteine,69-70 or responsive to changes in acetyl-CoA and SAM levels,
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which also contribute to formation of this modification and contain cysteine-derived elements.71
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Complex indirect regulation is also plausible, as exemplified by the recent finding that 1-
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methyladenosine in tRNA regulates translation and is responsive to glucose-dependent gene
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expression changes.72 Beyond these tRNA examples, gene translation may also be altered by
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mRNA modifications, some of which have already established to be metabolically sensitive
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(including m6A detailed above).73 It is likely that as novel roles for RNA modifications in gene
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expression continue to be discovered, additional examples of metabolic regulation of the
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epitranscriptome by cofactor depletion mechanism will emerge.
248 249
Metabolic Regulation of Epitranscriptome Writer Localization. (METTL16)
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Besides globally turning the activity of their writer and eraser enzymes, metabolic stimuli can also
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manifest surprising effects at specific genomic and transcriptomic loci.6 One of the first examples
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of this mechanism was characterized in chromatin, where genomic localization of the SAM
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synthetase MAT2A was found to be required for histone methylation and transcriptional
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repression of specific genes.74 This supported a model in which MAT2A supplies a localized pool
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of SAM to protein methyltransferases to aid transcriptional regulation. Extending this paradigm to
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the epitranscriptome, Pendleton and coworkers recently demonstrated that metabolic
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perturbations can reduce localized RNA methyltransferase activity at the MAT2A transcript level,
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and in so doing elicit a protein-RNA interaction which aids maintenance of cellular SAM levels.75
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MAT2A is a metabolic enzyme responsible for catalyzing the ATP-dependent formation of
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SAM from methionine. Early studies had found that the abundance of the MAT2A mRNA
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increases upon methionine depletion, presumably to allow cells to maintain SAM levels during
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nutrient stress.76 Through a series of elegant experiments, Pendleton et al determined that
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reduced cellular SAM triggers the splicing of an intron-retained MAT2A isoform that is normally
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unstable. Splicing of the intron-retained isoform increases the abundance of the MAT2A mRNA,
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and was further found to depend on a proximal hairpin in the 3’-UTR which is marked by the
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methylated RNA nucleobase m6A. Mutational studies in a model MAT2A construct demonstrated
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that methionine-dependent splicing an m6A site in the proximal hairpin. Additional studies found
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that methylation did not depend on the major mRNA methyltransferase METTL3,77 but rather
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catalyzed by a relatively uncharacterized methyltransferase, METTL16. Unexpectedly, while
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methionine depletion and METTL16 knockdown both decreased m6A in MAT2A’s 3’-UTR, only
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methionine depletion prompted splicing. This led the authors to propose a model where inefficient
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methylation due to low SAM causes METTL16 to linger on the MAT2A transcript. This metabolite-
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dependent increase in occupancy then promotes METTL16-driven splicing through m6A-
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independent effects. Consistent with this, the authors found that overexpression of a METTL16
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catalytic domain mutant, but not an RNA-binding domain mutant, could trigger splicing. Similarly,
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using MS2-tethering to increase METTL16 binding to a synthetic MAT2A construct increased
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splicing. Mutational analyses together with RNA immunoprecipitation were used to determine that
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the METTL16 methyltransferase domain was required for methionine-dependent changes in
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MAT2A mRNA occupancy, while the highly conserved VCR domain was found to be required for
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splicing. A number of additional studies to further characterize the regulation of m6A by METTL16
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led to the discovery that METTL16 can have a broad influence on m6A in messenger RNA through
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a combination of direct and indirect effects, a subset of which may be mediated by MAT2A.75 In
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another example of scientific convergence, analogous findings regarding the feedback regulation
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of MAT2A mRNA stability were also made by Shima and coworkers.78
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The discovery of a functional metabolite-dependent protein-RNA interaction provides
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fodder for future investigation of several areas. First, these studies suggest that the absence of
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an enzyme cofactor can cause RNA modification writers such as METTL16 to functionally act as
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readers, binding to unmodified substrates constitutively, and triggering non-catalytic functions
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such as nucleation of protein-protein interactions. This recalls studies that have suggested
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chromatin-modifying histone deacetylases can also act as functional readers.79 The ability of this
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mechanism to influence activity would also be expected to be highly dependent on kinetic
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mechanism of these enzymes; for example, many acetyltransferases are known exhibit ordered
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binding of acetyl-CoA followed by peptide substrate,80 while many methyltransferases are known
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to interact with substrate first, or show no preference for ordered binding.81 In the future it will be
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interesting to understand the biochemical basis for high occupancy RNA recognition by METTL16,
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as well as whether this paradigm applies to other classes of writers and erasers of nucleic acid
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and protein modifications. Of note, many writers and erasers of modifications are multifunctional
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enzymes with important non-catalytic activities, including the major mRNA methyltransferase
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METTL3 as well as the histone acetyltransferase EP300.82-83 Another question pertains to how
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prevalent the splicing-based stabilization of nuclear intron isoforms is as a homeostatic
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mechanism. A recent report found this mechanism regulates OGT, a glycosyltransferase that
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utilizes the glucose-derived metabolite UDP-O-GlcNAc as a metabolic precursor.84 The ability of
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cells to rapidly increase OGT levels may explain observations that glucose-derived histone
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acetylation is sensitive nutrient stress but protein O-GlcNAc-ylation is not.2, 85 This intimates a
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larger point, which is the ability of homeostatic mechanisms to cause unexpected effects on
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metabolically-derived protein and nucleic acid modifications. For example, based on the
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mechanism above MAT2A knockdown would be expected to have a more substantial effect on
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SAM levels than methionine deprivation. Thus, studying the metabolic regulation of an RNA
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modification under these two different conditions may lead to dramatically different conclusions.
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This suggests that care should be taken to directly measure metabolite levels, as well as probe
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for the existence of homeostatic feedback mechanisms based on writer, reader, eraser, or
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biosynthetic enzyme abundance in future studies of metabolically-regulated signaling. While
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homeostatic feedback adds a layer of complexity onto the paradigm of metabolic control, the
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studies above provide a model for unraveling these mechanisms and also powerfully illustrate the
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ability of such studies to yield new insights into gene regulation.
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Conclusions
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Here we have reviewed several recent examples of how metabolic mechanisms can influence the
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posttranscriptional chemical modification of RNA, also known as the epitranscriptome. In stem
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cells populations, metabolism is rewired in order to maintain a balance between pluripotency and
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differentiation, a strategy co-opted by several cancers. Compared to proteins and DNA, RNAs
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undergoes a larger spectrum of enzyme-catalyzed modifications, many of which are sourced from
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a more complex pool of metabolites. Exemplifying this, the mitochondrial wobble base
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modification τm5U is derived from methylene-THF and taurine, while the cytosolic modification
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mcm5s2U derives from cysteine, SAM, and acetyl-CoA (Figure 4). This suggests the potential for
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RNA modifications to have a more complex relationship with metabolism than protein
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modifications. This attribute is potentially compounded by the sequential establishment of many
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RNA modifications, affording additional opportunity for interplay. Furthermore, the participation of
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multiple classes of RNA molecules, all targets of writers and erasers, in the processes leading to
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protein production further contributes to a complex interaction between the metabolic environment
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in the cell and posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression. Another difference between
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epigenetic and epitranscriptomic regulation is the relative time-scale of these processes. While
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chromatin modifications can be copied during replication and inherited by daughter cells, RNA
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modifications will be lost upon turnover. The limited lifetime of cellular RNAs may alleviate the
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necessity for eraser enzymes for many of these modifications, with the consequence that the
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direct influence of metabolism on RNA modifications may manifest primarily through writer
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enzymes. Conversely, while changes in the equilibrium of chromatin modifications require
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extended time periods to be established, the relatively rapid turnover of RNA provides a
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mechanism for more rapid response to environmental stimuli, as exemplified by the FTO/Myc
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axis. Defining how these kinetic differences influence the scope of RNA modification-dependent
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regulatory responses, how metabolism may affect RNA stability and turnover, and whether rapid
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changes in RNA modifications can help facilitate long-term changes to the epigenome will be
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important to future understanding of this phenomenon. Finally, it is important to emphasize that
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we have highlighted only a small number of examples where metabolism has been found to
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directly influence the writers and erasers of RNA modifications. Additional metabolic mechanisms
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of epitranscriptomic regulation have been proposed86 and characterized,87 and many more novel
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examples no doubt await discovery. Future efforts to unravel these mechanisms will benefit from
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the development and application of new tools to study metabolic regulation. Methods for rapid
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metabolite induction and depletion will be important to study fast biological responses prior to
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engagement of pleiotropic effects.88-89 Improved approaches for mapping mRNA modifications
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may enable their effects on gene regulation to be assessed with greater resolution.90-91 New tools
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for the high-throughput analysis of metabolite-protein interactions involved in the regulation of
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writer and eraser enzymes will be useful to identify new pathways susceptible to this
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phenomenon.92-94 Further efforts in this area have the potential to provide substantial insights into
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the signaling role of metabolites and the role they play in the powerful gene regulatory
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mechanisms that underlie fundamental biology, medicine, and human disease.
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Acknowledgements.
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We sincerely apologize to the many authors whose work could not be included due to space
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limitations. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute,
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Center for Cancer Research (ZIABC011766 and ZIABC011488).
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Figure Legends.
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Figure 1. Metabolic regulation of the epitranscriptome by competitive inhibition. Mutant IDH1
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produces high levels of (R)-2-hydroxyglutarate which competitively inhibits FTO, a Fe(II)/2-
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ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase that erases m6A in mRNA. Increased m6A levels in mRNAs
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encoding oncogenes such as Myc reduce transcript stability and impede cell growth.
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Figure 2. Metabolic regulation of the epitranscriptome by cofactor depletion. Inhibition of SHMT2
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depletes 5,10-methylene-THF, which serves as the 1C donor for the enzymatic formation of 5-
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taurinomethyluridine (τm5U). This reduces τm5U in a subset of mitochondrial tRNAs and causes
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decreased translation of electron transport chain proteins.
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Figure 3. Metabolic regulation of epitranscriptome writer localization. Under conditions of nutrient
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abundance (left), METTL16 catalyzes methylation of an mRNA encoding the SAM biosynthetic
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enzyme MAT2A, limiting its splicing and reducing MAT2A mRNA stability. When SAM levels are
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low (right), METTL16 inefficiently methylates the MAT2A mRNA but forms a stable interaction.
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This triggers splicing and mRNA stabilization that allows more MAT2A to be produced and for
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cellular SAM homeostasis to be maintained.
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Figure 4. Diverse metabolic sources of RNA modifications. m6A = N6-methyladenosine, mcm5s2U
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= 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine, ac4C = N4-acetylcytidine.
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