Lysosomal retargeting of Myoferlin mitigates membrane stress to enable pancreatic cancer growth

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Abstract

Lysosomes must maintain integrity of their limiting membrane to ensure efficient fusion with incoming organelles and degradation of substrates within their lumen. Pancreatic cancer cells upregulate lysosomal biogenesis to enhance nutrient recycling and stress resistance, but whether dedicated programs for maintaining lysosomal membrane integrity facilitate pancreatic cancer growth is unknown. Using proteomic-based organelle profiling, we identify the Ferlin family plasma membrane repair factor, Myoferlin, as selectively and highly enriched on the membrane of pancreatic cancer lysosomes. Mechanistically, lysosome localization of Myoferlin is necessary and sufficient for maintenance of lysosome health and provides an early-acting protective system against membrane damage that is independent from the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)-mediated repair network. Myoferlin is upregulated in human pancreatic cancer, predicts poor survival, and its ablation severely impairs lysosome function and tumour growth in vivo . Thus, retargeting of plasma membrane repair factors enhances pro-oncogenic activities of the lysosome.

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  1. Excerpt

    Ferlins to the rescue! Plasma membrane repair protein Myoferlin relocates to lysosomes in pancreatic cancer cells to protect lysosomes against microtears in their membrane.