Research News

METTL8 links mt-tRNA m3C modification to the HIF1α/RTK/Akt axis to sustain GBM stemness and tumorigenicity

Glioblastoma is the most common and lethal form of adult brain cancer. The presence of cancer stem cells (so-called glioma stem cells) within the tumour, makes it difficult to eradicate glioblastoma as these cells can persist indefinitely and resist conventional therapies. In this paper, A/Prof Derrick Ong and his team discovered that a protein named methyltransferase 8 (METTL8) is involved in the 3-methylcytosine modification of specific mitochondrial-tRNAs, which indirectly promotes mitochondrial translation and respiration. Surprisingly, the METTL8-mediated mitochondrial respiration influences the hypoxia-regulatory cancer pathway, which helps maintain glioblastoma hallmarks. This finding has important translational value because it may explain why drugs targeting the hypoxia pathway fail to eradicate this cancer clinically. Targeting the METTL8 protein could be a new therapeutic strategy to eliminate glioblastoma.

Read more: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41419-024-06718-2

Share this story:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Related Research News

Research News

Macrophage Signatures that Help Predict Lymphoma Patient’s Survival Rate

Macrophages are “big eaters” in our body; they are immune cells that engulf and kill invading organisms and cancer cells. …

Read More →
Research News

PHF2 regulates genome topology and DNA replication in neural stem cells via cohesion

When a cell divides to make new cells, it needs to copy its DNA so that each new cell has …

Read More →
Research News

N2CR researchers uncover a missing link between poor diet and higher cancer risk

N2CR researchers led by Prof Ashok Venkitaraman and Dr Kong Li Ren have unearthed new findings which may help explain …

Read More →