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Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation

The Warburg effect, originally describing augmented lactogenesis in cancer, is associated with diverse cellular processes such as angiogenesis, hypoxia, macrophage polarization, and T-cell activation. This phenomenon is intimately linked with multiple diseases including neoplasia, sepsis, and autoim...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Di, Tang, Zhanyun, Huang, He, Zhou, Guolin, Cui, Chang, Weng, Yejing, Liu, Wenchao, Kim, Sunjoo, Lee, Sangkyu, Perez-Neut, Mathew, Czyz, Daniel, Hu, Rong, Ye, Zhen, He, Maomao, Zheng, Y. George, Shuman, Howard, Ding, Jun, Dai, Lunzhi, Ren, Bing, Roeder, Robert G., Becker, Lev, Zhao, Yingming
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6818755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31645732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1678-1
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author Zhang, Di
Tang, Zhanyun
Huang, He
Zhou, Guolin
Cui, Chang
Weng, Yejing
Liu, Wenchao
Kim, Sunjoo
Lee, Sangkyu
Perez-Neut, Mathew
Czyz, Daniel
Hu, Rong
Ye, Zhen
He, Maomao
Zheng, Y. George
Shuman, Howard
Ding, Jun
Dai, Lunzhi
Ren, Bing
Roeder, Robert G.
Becker, Lev
Zhao, Yingming
author_facet Zhang, Di
Tang, Zhanyun
Huang, He
Zhou, Guolin
Cui, Chang
Weng, Yejing
Liu, Wenchao
Kim, Sunjoo
Lee, Sangkyu
Perez-Neut, Mathew
Czyz, Daniel
Hu, Rong
Ye, Zhen
He, Maomao
Zheng, Y. George
Shuman, Howard
Ding, Jun
Dai, Lunzhi
Ren, Bing
Roeder, Robert G.
Becker, Lev
Zhao, Yingming
author_sort Zhang, Di
collection PubMed
description The Warburg effect, originally describing augmented lactogenesis in cancer, is associated with diverse cellular processes such as angiogenesis, hypoxia, macrophage polarization, and T-cell activation. This phenomenon is intimately linked with multiple diseases including neoplasia, sepsis, and autoimmune diseases(1,2). Lactate, a compound generated during Warburg effect, is widely known as an energy source and metabolic byproduct. However, its non-metabolic functions in physiology and disease remain unknown. Here we report lactate-derived histone lysine lactylation as a new epigenetic modification and demonstrate that histone lactylation directly stimulates gene transcription from chromatin. In total, we identify 28 lactylation sites on core histones in human and mouse cells. Hypoxia and bacterial challenges induce production of lactate through glycolysis that in turn serves as precursor for stimulating histone lactylation. Using bacterially exposed M1 macrophages as a model system, we demonstrate that histone lactylation has different temporal dynamics from acetylation. In the late phase of M1 macrophage polarization, elevated histone lactylation induces homeostatic genes involved in wound healing including arginase 1. Collectively, our results suggest the presence of an endogenous “lactate clock” in bacterially challenged M1 macrophages that turns on gene expression to promote homeostasis. Histone lactylation thus represents a new avenue for understanding the functions of lactate and its role in diverse pathophysiological conditions, including infection and cancer.
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spelling pubmed-68187552020-04-23 Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation Zhang, Di Tang, Zhanyun Huang, He Zhou, Guolin Cui, Chang Weng, Yejing Liu, Wenchao Kim, Sunjoo Lee, Sangkyu Perez-Neut, Mathew Czyz, Daniel Hu, Rong Ye, Zhen He, Maomao Zheng, Y. George Shuman, Howard Ding, Jun Dai, Lunzhi Ren, Bing Roeder, Robert G. Becker, Lev Zhao, Yingming Nature Article The Warburg effect, originally describing augmented lactogenesis in cancer, is associated with diverse cellular processes such as angiogenesis, hypoxia, macrophage polarization, and T-cell activation. This phenomenon is intimately linked with multiple diseases including neoplasia, sepsis, and autoimmune diseases(1,2). Lactate, a compound generated during Warburg effect, is widely known as an energy source and metabolic byproduct. However, its non-metabolic functions in physiology and disease remain unknown. Here we report lactate-derived histone lysine lactylation as a new epigenetic modification and demonstrate that histone lactylation directly stimulates gene transcription from chromatin. In total, we identify 28 lactylation sites on core histones in human and mouse cells. Hypoxia and bacterial challenges induce production of lactate through glycolysis that in turn serves as precursor for stimulating histone lactylation. Using bacterially exposed M1 macrophages as a model system, we demonstrate that histone lactylation has different temporal dynamics from acetylation. In the late phase of M1 macrophage polarization, elevated histone lactylation induces homeostatic genes involved in wound healing including arginase 1. Collectively, our results suggest the presence of an endogenous “lactate clock” in bacterially challenged M1 macrophages that turns on gene expression to promote homeostasis. Histone lactylation thus represents a new avenue for understanding the functions of lactate and its role in diverse pathophysiological conditions, including infection and cancer. 2019-10-23 2019-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6818755/ /pubmed/31645732 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1678-1 Text en Reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints (http://www.nature.com/reprints) . Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Zhang, Di
Tang, Zhanyun
Huang, He
Zhou, Guolin
Cui, Chang
Weng, Yejing
Liu, Wenchao
Kim, Sunjoo
Lee, Sangkyu
Perez-Neut, Mathew
Czyz, Daniel
Hu, Rong
Ye, Zhen
He, Maomao
Zheng, Y. George
Shuman, Howard
Ding, Jun
Dai, Lunzhi
Ren, Bing
Roeder, Robert G.
Becker, Lev
Zhao, Yingming
Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title_full Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title_fullStr Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title_short Metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
title_sort metabolic regulation of gene expression by histone lactylation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6818755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31645732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1678-1
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