We argue that the field of extracellular vesicle (EV) biology needs more transparent reporting to facilitate interpretation and replication of experiments. To achieve this, we describe EV-TRACK, a crowdsourcing knowledgebase (http://evtrack.org) that centralizes EV biology and methodology with the goal of stimulating authors, reviewers, editors and funders to put experimental guidelines into practice.
Most tumors have an aberrantly activated lipid metabolism 1 , 2 , which enables them to synthesize, elongate and desaturate fatty acids to support proliferation. However, only particular subsets of cancer cells are sensitive toward approaches targeting fatty acid metabolism, and in particular fatty acid desaturation 3 . This suggests that many cancer cells harbor an unexplored plasticity in their fatty acid metabolism. Here, we discover that some cancer cells can exploit an alternative fatty acid desaturation pathway. We identify various cancer cell lines, murine hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC), and primary human liver and lung carcinomas that desaturate palmitate to the unusual fatty acid sapienate to support membrane biosynthesis during proliferation. Accordingly, we found that sapienate biosynthesis enables cancer cells to bypass the known stearoyl-CoA desaturase (SCD)-dependent fatty acid desaturation. Thus, only by targeting both desaturation pathways the in vitro and in vivo proliferation of sapienate synthesizing cancer cells is impaired. Our discovery explains metabolic plasticity in fatty acid desaturation and constitutes an unexplored metabolic rewiring in cancers.
ATP13A2 (PARK9) is a late endo-lysosomal transporter of unknown function that is genetically implicated in a spectrum of neurodegenerative disorders, including Kufor-Rakeb syndrome, a parkinsonism with dementia 1 and early-onset Parkinson's disease (PD) 2. ATP13A2 offers protection against genetic and environmental risk factors of PD, whereas loss of ATP13A2 compromises lysosomal function 3. The lysosomal transport function of ATP13A2 remained unclear, but here, we establish ATP13A2 as a lysosomal polyamine exporter with highest affinity for spermine. Polyamines stimulate the activity of purified ATP13A2, while disease mutants are functionally impaired to a degree that correlates with the disease phenotype. ATP13A2 promotes cellular polyamine uptake via endocytosis and transports polyamines into the cytosol, which highlights a role for endo-lysosomes in cellular polyamine uptake. At high concentrations, polyamines induce cell toxicity, which is exacerbated by ATP13A2 loss due to lysosomal dysfunction, lysosomal rupture and cathepsin B activation. This phenotype is recapitulated in neurons and nematodes with loss of ATP13A2 or its orthologues. Thus, defective lysosomal polyamine export is a new mechanism for lysosome-dependent cell death that may be implicated in neurodegeneration. Our findings further shed light on the molecular identity of the elusive mammalian polyamine transport system. ATP13A2 is a P5B-ATPase belonging to the family of P-type ATPases, which couple ATP hydrolysis to substrate transport while transiently forming a catalytic phospho-intermediate 4. ATP13A2 is generally described as a heavy metal transporter 5 , but Ca 2+ 6 and the polyamine spermidine (SPD) 7,8 were also proposed. To screen for the transported substrate(s) of ATP13A2, we measured ATPase activity in the presence of various candidate substrates in solubilized microsomal membrane fractions of SH-SY5Y cells that overexpress human ATP13A2 wild type (WT) (WT-OE) or comparable levels of the catalytically dead D508N mutant (D508N-OE) 9,10. ATPase activity of ATP13A2 WT was significantly stimulated by the polyamines SPD and spermine (SPM) (Fig. 1a), whereas SPM had no effect on the D508N mutant (Extended Data Fig. 1a). MnCl2, ZnCl2, FeCl3, CaCl2, diamines, monoamines and amino acids exerted no effect (Extended Data Fig. 1a-3 d). The polyamines SPM, N 1-acetylspermine and SPD were able to stimulate ATPase activity in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig. 1b, Extended Data Fig. 1e) with the highest apparent affinity for SPM (Extended Data Table 1). The catalytic auto-phosphorylation and/or dephosphorylation reactions of P-type ATPases occur in response to binding of the transported substrate 4. ATP13A2 forms a phospho-intermediate on the D508 residue in the absence of SPM supplementation 9,10 , whereas SPM leads to a dose-dependent reduction in ATP13A2 phospho-enzyme levels (Fig. 1c), which is not seen with ornithine (Extended Data Fig. 1f). The dephosphorylation rate following a chase with non-radioactive ATP increased in the presence of...
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