Abstract
ABSTRACTDietary methionine restriction is associated with a reduction in tumor growth in preclinical studies and an increase in lifespan in animal models. The mechanism by which methionine restriction inhibits tumor growth while sparing normal cells is incompletely understood, except for the observation that normal cells can utilize methionine or homocysteine interchangeably (methionine independence) while most cancer cells are strictly dependent on methionine availability. Here, we compared a typical methionine dependent and a rare methionine independent melanoma cell line. We found that replacing methionine with homocysteine generally induced hypomethylation in gene promoters. We isolated nuclear proteins and submitted it for tandem mass tag (TMT) proteomics. This analysis revealed that several proteins involved in the mitochondrial integrated stress response (ISR) were upregulated in response to the replacement of methionine to homocysteine in both cell lines, but to a much greater degree in the methionine dependent cell line. Consistent with the ISR signature, a proteomic analysis of a subcellular fraction enriched for mitochondrial content revealed a strong enrichment for proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation. Analysis of cellular bioenergetics confirmed that homocysteine induces a decrease in ATP production from oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis, but to a similar extent in methionine dependent and methionine independent cells. The mitochondrial integrated stress response shared a signature with ferroptosis. Methionine dependent cells displayed a strong ferroptotic signature, which was decreased by half in methionine independent cells. Consistent with ferroptosis, lipid peroxidation was significantly increased in methionine independent cells grown in homocysteine, and viability could be rescued partially but significantly with the inhibitor ferrostatin. Therefore, we propose that methionine stress induces ferroptotic cell death in methionine dependent cancer cells.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory