The Second Mitochondrial Activator of Caspases (SMAC) regulates growth, inflammation and mitochondrial integrity in cancer cells
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SMAC is a mitochondrial intermembrane space protein, which is released during apoptosis and whose known function is antagonism of inhibitor of apoptosis proteins in the cytosol, to facilitate caspase activation. Recent data suggest that SMAC can also be released by sub-lethal signals in the apoptosis pathway, in the absence of cell death. We here explored potential functions of SMAC in non-apoptotic cells. We found that a portion of SMAC is spontaneously released into the cytosol in the absence of apoptosis, regulated by the BCL-2-family proteins BAX and BAK and the fission GTPase DRP1. In cancer cell lines, SMAC was required for the activation of caspases in lethal and non-lethal conditions, while this contribution to caspase-activation was much smaller in non-malignant fibroblast lines. In cells with high levels of cytosolic SMAC, SMAC deficiency reduced in vitro migration, invasion and anchorage-independent growth. SMAC-deficient cells further showed a reduced activity in interferon signalling, associated with reduced cytosolic presence of mitochondrial DNA and activation of the stimulator of interferon genes (STING), and SMAC expression levels correlated with interferon-induced genes in cancer data sets. We further found that SMAC can regulate mitochondrial morphology and integrity. Finally, high gene-expression of SMAC was associated with poor prognosis in patients of several cancer types. These results identify SMAC as a regulator of inflammation and growth behaviour of cancer cells. They further report a mitochondrial function of SMAC and demonstrate a role of SMAC in human cancer biology across several cancer entities.