ASCT2 palmitoylation regulated by JNK1-ZDHHC14 axis orchestrates glutamine metabolism and NSCLC progression.
1/5 보강
S-palmitoylation, a reversible post-translational modification regulates protein stability and cellular functions, yet its role in glutamine metabolism remains unclear.
APA
Chen X, Ke Z, et al. (2026). ASCT2 palmitoylation regulated by JNK1-ZDHHC14 axis orchestrates glutamine metabolism and NSCLC progression.. Cell discovery, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41421-026-00870-z
MLA
Chen X, et al.. "ASCT2 palmitoylation regulated by JNK1-ZDHHC14 axis orchestrates glutamine metabolism and NSCLC progression.." Cell discovery, vol. 12, no. 1, 2026.
PMID
41730846
Abstract
S-palmitoylation, a reversible post-translational modification regulates protein stability and cellular functions, yet its role in glutamine metabolism remains unclear. Here, we show that ZDHHC14 as the key palmitoyltransferase catalyzing ASCT2 palmitoylation at conserved Cys39 and Cys48 residues, promoting lysosomal degradation of this glutamine transporter, whereas ABHD17B functions as a depalmitoylase to stabilize ASCT2. Mechanistically, glutamine deprivation activates JNK1, which directly phosphorylates ZDHHC14 at Thr440 residue, triggering its degradation and thereby enhancing ASCT2 stability. Importantly, combination of JNK and ASCT2 inhibitors synergistically inhibits glutamine metabolism and tumor growth in vivo. These findings reveal a phosphorylation-palmitoylation axis linking JNK-mediated ASCT2 palmitoylation and glutamine metabolism, offering a potential therapeutic strategy for non-small cell lung cancer.
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- Rare fusion transcript in a refractory adult T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma.
- Rabdosin B suppresses proliferation of nonsmall cell lung cancer by regulating the SRC/PI3K/AKT signaling pathway.
- Development of a chemiluminescence immunoassay for proGRP in human serum.
- Genetically encoded biosensors in microbes for Tumor targeting.
- Analysis of discordant results in multi-technique platform-based MRD detection in multiple myeloma and the clinical decision-making dilemma.