GFAT2 and AMDHD2 act in tandem to control the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway
Abstract
The hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP) produces the essential metabolite UDP-GlcNAc and plays a key role in metabolism, cancer, and aging. The HBP is controlled by its rate-limiting enzyme glutamine fructose-6-phosphate amidotransferase (GFAT) that is directly inhibited by UDP-GlcNAc in a feedback loop. HBP regulation by GFAT is well studied but other HBP regulators have remained obscure. Elevated UDP-GlcNAc levels counteract the glycosylation toxin tunicamycin (TM) and thus we screened for TM resistance in haploid mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) using random chemical mutagenesis to pinpoint new HBP regulators. We identified the N-acetylglucosamine deacetylase AMDHD2 that catalyzes a reverse reaction in the HBP and its loss strongly elevated UDP-GlcNAc. To better understand AMDHD2, we solved the crystal structure and found that loss-of-function is caused by protein destabilization or interference with its catalytic activity. Finally, we show that mESCs express AMDHD2 together with GFAT2 instead of the more common paralog GFAT1. Compared with GFAT1, GFAT2 had a much lower sensitivity to UDP-GlcNAc inhibition, explaining how AMDHD2 loss-of-function resulted in HBP activation. This HBP configuration in which AMDHD2 serves to balance GFAT2 activity was also observed in other mESCs and, consistently, the GFAT2/GFAT1 ratio decreased with differentiation of mouse and human embryonic stem cells. Together, our data reveal a critical function of AMDHD2 in limiting UDP-GlcNAc production in cells that use GFAT2 for metabolite entry into the HBP.
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