Abstract

Fluorizoline (FLZ) binds to prohibitin-1 and -2 (PHB1/2), which are pleiotropic scaffold proteins known to affect signaling pathways involved in several intracellular processes. However, it is not yet clear how FLZ exerts its effect. Here, we show that exposure of three different human cancer cell lines to FLZ increases the phosphorylation of key translation factors, particularly of initiation factor 2 (eIF2) and elongation factor 2 (eEF2), modifications that inhibit their activities. FLZ also impaired signaling through mTOR complex 1, which also regulates the translational machinery, e.g. through the eIF4E-binding protein 4E-BP1. In line with these findings, FLZ potently inhibited protein synthesis. We noted that the first phase of this inhibition involves very rapid eEF2 phosphorylation, which is catalyzed by a dedicated Ca2+-dependent protein kinase, eEF2 kinase (eEF2K). We also demonstrate that FLZ induces a swift and marked rise in intracellular Ca2+ levels, likely explaining the effects on eEF2. Disruption of normal Ca2+ homeostasis can also induce endoplasmic reticulum stress, and our results suggest that induction of this stress response contributes to the increased phosphorylation of eIF2, likely because of activation of the eIF2-modifying kinase PKR-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK). We show that FLZ induces cancer cell death and that this effect involves contributions from the phosphorylation of both eEF2 and eIF2. Our findings provide important new insights into the biological effects of FLZ and thus the roles of PHBs, specifically in regulating Ca2+ levels, cellular protein synthesis, and cell survival.

Highlights

  • Dysregulation of protein synthesis plays an important roles in many diseases, in particular, cancers [1]

  • The rate of protein synthesis can be modulated by changes in the phosphorylation of proteins involved in the initiation and elongation stages of the process of mRNA translation; these are termed eukaryotic initiation or elongation factors, respectively

  • A slight increase in the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) was consistently observed (Fig. 1A), which likely accounts for the small rise in the phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF4E, which is linked to ERK signaling via the eIF4E kinases, the MAP kinaseinteracting kinases (MNK) [9, 36]

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Summary

Introduction

Dysregulation of protein synthesis (mRNA translation) plays an important roles in many diseases, in particular, cancers [1]. To assess whether the inhibition of protein synthesis caused by FLZ did involve the phosphorylation of eEF2, we made use of MDA-MB-231 cells in which the gene for eEF2K

Results
Conclusion
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