Lactylation, a Novel Metabolic Reprogramming Code: Current Status and Prospects

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Abstract

Lactate is an end product of glycolysis. As a critical energy source for mitochondrial respiration, lactate also acts as a precursor of gluconeogenesis and a signaling molecule. We briefly summarize emerging concepts regarding lactate metabolism, such as the lactate shuttle, lactate homeostasis, and lactate-microenvironment interaction. Accumulating evidence indicates that lactate-mediated reprogramming of immune cells and enhancement of cellular plasticity contribute to establishing disease-specific immunity status. However, the mechanisms by which changes in lactate states influence the establishment of diverse functional adaptive states are largely uncharacterized. Posttranslational histone modifications create a code that functions as a key sensor of metabolism and are responsible for transducing metabolic changes into stable gene expression patterns. In this review, we describe the recent advances in a novel lactate-induced histone modification, histone lysine lactylation. These observations support the idea that epigenetic reprogramming-linked lactate input is related to disease state outputs, such as cancer progression and drug resistance.

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Chen, A. N., Luo, Y., Yang, Y. H., Fu, J. T., Geng, X. M., Shi, J. P., & Yang, J. (2021, June 10). Lactylation, a Novel Metabolic Reprogramming Code: Current Status and Prospects. Frontiers in Immunology. Frontiers Media S.A. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.688910

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