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  2. The oncoprotein SET promotes serine-derived one-carbon metabolism by regulating SHMT2 enzymatic activity

The oncoprotein SET promotes serine-derived one-carbon metabolism by regulating SHMT2 enzymatic activity

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 May 13;122(19):e2412854122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2412854122.
Zishan Jiao 1 Mi Zhang 2 Jingyuan Ning 1 Han Yao 1 Xiaojun Yan 1 Zhen Wu 1 Dexuan Wu 1 Yajing Liu 1 Meng Zhang 1 Lin Wang 3 Donglai Wang 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Common Mechanism Research for Major Diseases and Department of Medical Genetics, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences and School of Basic Medicine, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100005, China.
  • 2 Department of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology, School of Basic Medicine, China Medical University, Shenyang 110122, China.
  • 3 State Key Laboratory of Common Mechanism Research for Major Disease, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100730, China.
Abstract

Cancer cells frequently reprogram one-carbon metabolic pathways to fulfill their vigorous demands of biosynthesis and antioxidant defense for survival and proliferation. Dysfunction of oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes is critically involved in this process, but the precise mechanisms by which Cancer cells actively trigger one-carbon metabolic alterations remain incompletely elucidated. Here, by using untargeted metabolomic analysis, we identify the oncoprotein SE translocation (SET) as a key regulator of one-carbon metabolism in Cancer cells. SET physically interacts with mitochondrial SHMT2 and facilitates SHMT2 enzymatic activity. Loss of SET profoundly suppresses serine-derived one-carbon metabolic flux, whereas reexpression of ectopic SET leads to the opposite effect. Notably, although the presence of SHMT2 is critical for SET-mediated one-carbon metabolic alterations, the depletion of SHMT2 alone is insufficient to antagonize SET-induced tumor growth, probably due to functional compensation by its cytosolic isozyme SHMT1 upon SHMT2 knockdown. Instead, pharmacological targeting of cellular SHMT (including both SHMT1 and SHMT2) activity results in dramatic suppression of SET-induced tumor growth. Moreover, by using a Kras/Lkb1 mutation-driven lung tumor mouse model, we demonstrate that the loss of SET compromises both tumor formation and intratumoral SHMT2 enzymatic activity. Clinically, the overexpression of SET and SHMT2 is observed in lung tumors, both of which correlate with poor prognosis. Our study reveals a SET-SHMT2 axis in regulating serine-derived one-carbon metabolism and uncovers one-carbon metabolic reprogramming as a mechanism for SET-driven tumorigenesis.

Keywords

SET; SHMT2; enzymatic activity; one-carbon metabolism; tumor.

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