Published March 3, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Dynamic investigation of hypoxia-induced L-lactylation

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Cornell University
  • 3. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • 4. Peking University

Description

The recently identified histone modification lysine lactylation can be stimulated by L-lactate and glycolysis. Although the chemical group added upon lysine lactylation was originally proposed to be the L-enantiomer of lactate (KL-la), two isomeric modifications, lysine D-lactylation (KD-la) and N-ε-(carboxyethyl) lysine (Kce), also exist in cells, with their precursors being metabolites of glycolysis. The dynamic regulation and differences among these three modifications in response to hypoxia remain poorly understood. In this study, we demonstrate that intracellular KL-la, but not KD-la or Kce, is up-regulated in response to hypoxia. Depletion of glyoxalase enzymes, GLO1 and GLO2, had minimal impact on KD-la, Kce, or hypoxia-induced KL-la. Conversely, blocking glycolytic flux to L-lactate under hypoxic conditions by knocking out lactate dehydrogenase A/B completely abolished the induction of KL-la but increased KD-la and Kce. We further observed a correlation between the level of KL-la and hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1α) expression under hypoxic conditions and when small molecules were used to stabilize HIF-1α in the normoxia condition. Our result demonstrated that there is a strong correlation between HIF-1α and KL-la in lung cancer tissues and that patient samples with higher grade tend to have higher KL-la levels. Using a proteomics approach, we quantified 66 KL-la sites that were up-regulated by hypoxia and demonstrated that p300/CBP contributes to hypoxia-induced KL-la. Collectively, our study demonstrates that KL-la, rather than KD-la or Kce, is the prevailing lysine lactylation in response to hypoxia. Our results therefore demonstrate a link between KL-la and the hypoxia-induced adaptation of tumor cells.

Data availability

Proteomics data have been deposited in iProX (IPX0006076002, https://www.iprox.cn//page/subproject.html?id=IPX0006076002) (51). All other data are included in the manuscript and/or SI Appendix.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2404899122
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:14765

Funding

University of Chicago
Nancy and Leonard Florsheim Family Fund
National Institutes of Health
GM135504
National Institutes of Health
AR078555
National Institutes of Health
CA251677
National Institutes of Health
R01DK102960

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ben May Department for Cancer Research