Comprehensive analysis of the ubiquitinome during oncogene-induced senescence in human fibroblasts

被引:19
|
作者
Bengsch, Fee [1 ]
Tu, Zhigang [1 ]
Tang, Hsin-Yao [2 ]
Zhu, Hengrui [1 ]
Speicher, David W. [3 ,4 ]
Zhang, Rugang [1 ]
机构
[1] Wistar Inst Anat & Biol, Ctr Canc, Gene Express & Regulat Program, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Wistar Inst Anat & Biol, Prote Facil, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Wistar Inst Anat & Biol, Mol & Cellular Oncogenesis Program, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[4] Wistar Inst Anat & Biol, Ctr Syst & Computat Biol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
oncogene-induced senescence; ubiquitination; protein synthesis; proteomics; protein translation; mass spectrometry; CELLULAR SENESCENCE; MTOR; IDENTIFICATION; EXPRESSION; CULTURE; TARGET; LYSINE;
D O I
10.1080/15384101.2015.1026492
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Oncogene-induced senescence (OIS) is an important tumor suppression mechanism preventing uncontrolled proliferation in response to aberrant oncogenic signaling. The profound functional and morphological remodelling of the senescent cell involves extensive changes. In particular, alterations in protein ubiquitination during senescence have not been systematically analyzed previously. Here, we report the first global ubiquitination profile of primary human cells undergoing senescence. We employed a well-characterized in vitro model of OIS, primary human fibroblasts expressing oncogenic RAS. To compare the ubiquitinome of RAS-induced OIS and controls, ubiquitinated peptides were enriched by immune affinity purification and subjected to liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). We identified 4,472 ubiquitination sites, with 397 sites significantly changed (>3 standard deviations) in senescent cells. In addition, we performed mass spectrometry analysis of total proteins in OIS and control cells to account for parallel changes in both protein abundance and ubiquitin levels that did not affect the percentage of ubiquitination of a given protein. Pathway analysis revealed that the OIS-induced ubiquitinome alterations mainly affected 3 signaling networks: eIF2 signaling, eIF4/p70S6K signaling, and mTOR signaling. Interestingly, the majority of the changed ubiquitinated proteins in these pathways belong to the translation machinery. This includes several translation initiation factors (eIF2C2, eIF2B4, eIF3I, eIF3L, eIF4A1) and elongation factors (eEF1G, eEF1A) as well as 40S (RPS4X, RPS7, RPS11 and RPS20) and 60S ribosomal subunits (RPL10, RPL11, RPL18 and RPL35a). In addition, we observed enriched ubiquitination of aminoacyl-tRNA ligases (isoleucyl-, glutamine-, and tyrosine-tRNA ligase), which provide the amino acid-loaded tRNAs for protein synthesis. These results suggest that ubiquitination affects key components of the translation machinery to regulate protein synthesis during OIS. Our results thus point toward ubiquitination as a hitherto unappreciated regulatory mechanism during OIS.
引用
收藏
页码:1540 / 1547
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Chromatin architecture and gene regulation in oncogene-induced senescence.
    Narita, Masashi
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2013, 73 (08)
  • [42] Oncogene-induced senescence and tumour control in complex biological systems
    Galluzzi, Lorenzo
    Vitale, Ilio
    CELL DEATH AND DIFFERENTIATION, 2018, 25 (06) : 1005 - 1006
  • [43] Massive reshaping of genome-nuclear lamina interactions during oncogene-induced senescence
    Lenain, Christelle
    de Graaf, Carolyn A.
    Pagie, Ludo
    Visser, Nils L.
    de Haas, Marcel
    de Vries, Sandra S.
    Peric-Hupkes, Daniel
    van Steensel, Bas
    Peeper, Daniel S.
    GENOME RESEARCH, 2017, 27 (10) : 1634 - 1644
  • [44] A new path to oncogene-induced senescence At the crossroads of splicing and translation
    Das, Shipra
    Fregoso, Oliver I.
    Krainer, Adrian R.
    CELL CYCLE, 2013, 12 (10) : 1477 - 1479
  • [45] The Myc/macrophage tango: Oncogene-induced senescence, Myc style
    Lee, Soyoung
    Schmitt, Clemens A.
    Reimann, Maurice
    SEMINARS IN CANCER BIOLOGY, 2011, 21 (06) : 377 - 384
  • [46] Oncogene-Induced Senescence Is a Crucial Antitumor Defense Mechanism of Human Endometrial Stromal Cells
    Toropov, Artem L.
    Deryabin, Pavel I.
    Shatrova, Alla N.
    Borodkina, Aleksandra V.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2023, 24 (18)
  • [47] Autophagy-mediated degradation of nuclear envelope proteins during oncogene-induced senescence
    Lenain, Christelle
    Gusyatiner, Olga
    Douma, Sirith
    van den Broek, Bram
    Peeper, Daniel S.
    CARCINOGENESIS, 2015, 36 (11) : 1263 - 1274
  • [48] Oncogene-induced senescence and melanoma: where do we stand?
    Peeper, Daniel S.
    PIGMENT CELL & MELANOMA RESEARCH, 2011, 24 (06) : 1107 - 1111
  • [49] Glucose metabolism and hexosamine pathway regulate oncogene-induced senescence
    D Gitenay
    C Wiel
    H Lallet-Daher
    D Vindrieux
    S Aubert
    L Payen
    H Simonnet
    D Bernard
    Cell Death & Disease, 2014, 5 : e1089 - e1089
  • [50] p53-independent upregulation of miR-34a during oncogene-induced senescence represses MYC
    Christoffersen, N. R.
    Shalgi, R.
    Frankel, L. B.
    Leucci, E.
    Lees, M.
    Klausen, M.
    Pilpel, Y.
    Nielsen, F. C.
    Oren, M.
    Lund, A. H.
    CELL DEATH AND DIFFERENTIATION, 2010, 17 (02) : 236 - 245