Author:
He Xiadi,Wei Yun,Wu Jiang,Wang Qiwei,Bergholz Johann S.,Gu Hao,Zou Junjie,Lin Sheng,Wang Weihua,Xie Shaozhen,Jiang Tao,Lee James,Asara John M.,Zhang Ke,Cantley Lewis C.,Zhao Jean J.
Abstract
SUMMARYVitamin C (vitC) is a vital nutrient for health and also used as a therapeutic agent in diseases such as cancer. However, the mechanisms underlying vitC’s effects remain elusive. Here we report that vitC directly modifies lysine without enzymes to form vitcyl-lysine, termed “vitcylation”, in a dose-, pH-, and sequence-dependent manner across diverse proteins in cells. We further discover that vitC vitcylates K298 site of STAT1, which impairs its interaction with the phosphatase PTPN2, preventing STAT1 Y701 dephosphorylation and leading to increased STAT1-mediated IFN pathway activation in tumor cells. As a result, these cells have increased MHC/HLA class-I expression and activate immune cells in co-cultures. Tumors collected from vitC-treated tumor-bearing mice have enhanced vitcylation, STAT1 phosphorylation and antigen presentation. The identification of vitcylation as a novel PTM and the characterization of its effect in tumor cells opens a new avenue for understanding vitC in cellular processes, disease mechanisms, and therapeutics.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory