Abstract

Cancer stem cells (CSCs), which are distinct subpopulations of tumor cells, have a substantially higher tumor-initiating capacity and are closely related to poor clinical outcomes. Damage to organelles can trigger CSC pool exhaustion; however, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. ZER6 is a zinc-finger protein with two isoforms possessing different amino termini: p52-ZER6 and p71-ZER6. Since their discovery, almost no study reported on their biological and pathological functions. Herein, we found that p52-ZER6 was crucial for CSC population maintenance; p52-ZER6-knocking down almost abolished the tumor initiation capability. Through transcriptomic analyses together with in vitro and in vivo studies, we identified insulin like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) as the transcriptional target of p52-ZER6 that mediated p52-ZER6 regulation of CSC by promoting pro-survival mitophagy. Moreover, this regulation of mitophagy-mediated CSC population maintenance is specific to p52-ZER6, as p71-ZER6 failed to exert the same effect, most possibly due to the presence of the HUB1 domain at its N-terminus. These results provide a new perspective on the regulatory pathway of pro-survival mitophagy in tumor cells and the molecular mechanism underlying p52-ZER6 oncogenic activity, suggesting that targeting p52-ZER6/IGF1R axis to induce CSC pool exhaustion may be a promising anti-tumor therapeutic strategy.

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