Alterations in ZnT1 expression and function lead to impaired intracellular zinc homeostasis in cancer

被引:0
|
作者
Adrian Israel Lehvy
Guy Horev
Yarden Golan
Fabian Glaser
Yael Shammai
Yehuda Gérard Assaraf
机构
[1] Technion-Israel Institute of Technology,The Fred Wyszkowski Cancer Research, Laboratory, Department of Biology
[2] Technion-Israel,Bioinformatics Knowledge Unit, The Lorry, I. Lokey Interdisciplinary Center for Life, Sciences and Engineering
[3] Institute of Technology,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Zinc is vital for the structure and function of ~3000 human proteins and hence plays key physiological roles. Consequently, impaired zinc homeostasis is associated with various human diseases including cancer. Intracellular zinc levels are tightly regulated by two families of zinc transporters: ZIPs and ZnTs; ZIPs import zinc into the cytosol from the extracellular milieu, or from the lumen of organelles into the cytoplasm. In contrast, the vast majority of ZnTs compartmentalize zinc within organelles, whereas the ubiquitously expressed ZnT1 is the sole zinc exporter. Herein, we explored the hypothesis that qualitative and quantitative alterations in ZnT1 activity impair cellular zinc homeostasis in cancer. Towards this end, we first used bioinformatics to analyze inactivating mutations in ZIPs and ZNTs, catalogued in the COSMIC and gnomAD databases, representing tumor specimens and healthy population controls, respectively. ZnT1, ZnT10, ZIP8, and ZIP10 showed extremely high rates of loss of function mutations in cancer as compared to healthy controls. Analysis of the putative functional impact of missense mutations in ZnT1-ZnT10 and ZIP1-ZIP14, using homologous protein alignment and structural predictions, revealed that ZnT1 displays a markedly increased frequency of predicted functionally deleterious mutations in malignant tumors, as compared to a healthy population. Furthermore, examination of ZnT1 expression in 30 cancer types in the TCGA database revealed five tumor types with significant ZnT1 overexpression, which predicted dismal prognosis for cancer patient survival. Novel functional zinc transport assays, which allowed for the indirect measurement of cytosolic zinc levels, established that wild type ZnT1 overexpression results in low intracellular zinc levels. In contrast, overexpression of predicted deleterious ZnT1 missense mutations did not reduce intracellular zinc levels, validating eight missense mutations as loss of function (LoF) mutations. Thus, alterations in ZnT1 expression and LoF mutations in ZnT1 provide a molecular mechanism for impaired zinc homeostasis in cancer formation and/or progression.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Zinc transport in mouse mammary epithelial cells is regulated by lactogenic hormones and zinc through effects on ZnT1 and ZnT4.
    Kelleher, SL
    Lonnerdal, B
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2002, 16 (04): : A617 - A617
  • [22] Zinc transporter 1 (ZnT1) is overexpressed in bladder cancer and promotes the proliferation and invasion of bladder cancer BIU87 cells
    Jing, Hongwei
    Kong, Chuize
    Liu, Tao
    Zeng, Yu
    Zhang, Zhe
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2018, 11 (05): : 5323 - 5331
  • [23] Synaptic zinc inhibition of NMDA receptors depends on the association of GluN2A with the zinc transporter ZnT1
    Krall, Rebecca F.
    Moutal, Aubin
    Phillips, Matthew B.
    Asraf, Hila
    Johnson, Jon W.
    Khanna, Rajesh
    Hershfinkel, Michal
    Aizenman, Elias
    Tzounopoulos, Thanos
    SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2020, 6 (27)
  • [24] Progesterone and zinc regulate zinc transport in human trophoblasts through changes in Zip4 and ZnT1
    Kelleher, SL
    Du, XG
    Jiang, RL
    Lonnerdal, B
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2006, 20 (05): : A986 - A986
  • [25] Zinc sensing by metal-responsive transcription factor 1 (MTF1) controls metallothionein and ZnT1 expression to buffer the sensitivity of the transcriptome response to zinc
    Hardyman, J. E. J.
    Tyson, J.
    Jackson, K. A.
    Aldridge, C.
    Cockell, S. J.
    Wakeling, L. A.
    Valentine, R. A.
    Ford, D.
    METALLOMICS, 2016, 8 (03) : 337 - 343
  • [26] Expression Patterns and correlation with Metabolic Markers of Zinc Transporters ZIP14 and ZNT1 in obesity and polycystic ovary syndrome
    Maxel, Trine
    Svendsen, Pernille Fog
    Smidt, Kamille
    Lauridsen, Jesper Krogh
    Brock, Birgitte
    Pedersen, Steen Bonlykke
    Rungby, Jorgen
    Larsen, Agnete
    FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2017, 8
  • [27] Structural insights into human zinc transporter ZnT1 mediated Zn2+ efflux
    Long, Yonghui
    Zhu, Zhini
    Zhou, Zixuan
    Yang, Chuanhui
    Chao, Yulin
    Wang, Yuwei
    Zhou, Qingtong
    Wang, Ming-Wei
    Qu, Qianhui
    EMBO REPORTS, 2024, 25 (11) : 5006 - 5025
  • [28] Expression of the ZNT1 Zinc Transporter from the Metal Hyperaccumulator Noccaea caerulescens Confers Enhanced Zinc and Cadmium Tolerance and Accumulation to Arabidopsis thaliana
    Lin, Ya-Fen
    Hassan, Zeshan
    Talukdar, Sangita
    Schat, Henk
    Aarts, Mark G. M.
    PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (03):
  • [29] MiR-411 suppresses the development of bladder cancer by regulating ZnT1
    Liu, Yang
    Liu, Tao
    Jin, Hongwei
    Yin, Lei
    Yu, Hongyuan
    Bi, Jianbin
    ONCOTARGETS AND THERAPY, 2018, 11 : 8695 - 8704
  • [30] ZnT-1 expression in astroglial cells protects against zinc toxicity and slows the accumulation of intracellular zinc
    Nolte, C
    Gore, A
    Sekler, I
    Kresse, W
    Hershfinkel, M
    Hoffmann, A
    Kettenmann, H
    Moran, A
    GLIA, 2004, 48 (02) : 145 - 155