J Biol Chem. 2023 Nov 08. pii: S0021-9258(23)02485-7. [Epub ahead of print] 105457
One-carbon metabolism is a central metabolic pathway critical for the biosynthesis of several amino acids, methyl group donors, and nucleotides. The pathway mostly relies on the transfer of a carbon unit from the amino acid serine, through the cofactor folate (in its several forms), and to the ultimate carbon acceptors that include nucleotides and methyl groups used for methylation of proteins, RNA, and DNA. Nucleotides are required for DNA replication, DNA repair, gene expression, and protein translation, through ribosomal RNA. Therefore, the one-carbon metabolism pathway is essential for cell growth and function in all cells, but is specifically important for rapidly proliferating cells. The regulation of one-carbon metabolism is a critical aspect of the normal and pathological function of the pathway, such as in cancer, where hijacking these regulatory mechanisms feeds an increased need for nucleotides. One-carbon metabolism is regulated at several levels: via gene expression, posttranslational modification, sub-cellular compartmentalization, allosteric inhibition, and feedback regulation. In this review we aim to inform the readers of relevant one-carbon metabolism regulation mechanisms, and to bring forward the need to further study this aspect of one-carbon metabolism. The review aims to integrate two major aspects of cancer metabolism - signaling downstream of nutrient sensing, and one-carbon metabolism, because while each of these is critical for the proliferation of cancerous cells, their integration is critical for comprehensive understating of cellular metabolism in transformed cells and can lead to clinically-relevant insights.
Keywords: allosteric inhibition; cancer metabolism; metabolic adaptation; metabolic compartmentalization; post-translational modifications; transcriptional regulation