Publications

SET1B drives sustained HIF activity and disease progression in clear cell renal cell carcinoma.

Paper
Preprint

Ortmann BM*, Bertlin JAC, Seear R, Arnaiz E, Lin S, Salman AM, Wilson L, Harris AL, Steward GD, Hepburn A, Clare S, Robson CN, Speak AO, Nathan JA* (*joint corresponding authors)

Abstract

The cellular response to hypoxia is driven by hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), which regulate genes involved in glycolysis, angiogenesis, and cell proliferation, as well as inflammation and tumour progression. HIF activation is well-characterised and is primarily regulated by oxygen-dependent prolyl hydroxylation and subsequent degradation. However, how transcription of individual HIF target genes is regulated at the chromatin level is less clear. SET1B, a histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferase, has emerged as a key modulator of HIF target gene transcription. Our study reveals that SET1B interacts with RNA Polymerase II to coordinate sustained HIF-mediated transcriptional activity through multiple functional domains. We also show that in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), SET1B is critical for sustained HIF activity, and SET1B expression correlates with disease progression and metastasis in patient samples. Moreover, SET1B depletion enhances the efficacy of HIF-2 inhibitors, establishing SET1B as a potential therapeutic target in ccRCC.

VHL synthetic lethality screens uncover CBF-β as a negative regulator of STING.

Paper
Preprint

Bertlin JAC, Pauzaite T, Liang Q, Wit N, Williamson JC, Sia JJ, Matheson NJ, Ortmann BM, Mitchell TJ, Speak AO, Zhang Q, Nathan JA.

Abstract

Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) represents the most common form of kidney cancer and is typified by biallelic inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumour suppressor gene. Here, we undertake genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 screening to reveal synthetic lethal interactors of VHL, and uncover that loss of Core Binding Factor β (CBF-β) causes cell death in VHL-null ccRCC cell lines and impairs tumour establishment and growth in vivo. This synthetic relationship is independent of the elevated activity of hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs) in VHL-null cells, but does involve the RUNX transcription factors that are known binding partners of CBF-β. Mechanistically, CBF-β loss leads to upregulation of type I interferon signalling, and we uncover a direct inhibitory role for CBF-β at the STING locus controlling Interferon Stimulated Gene expression. Targeting CBF-β in kidney cancer both selectively induces tumour cell lethality and promotes activation of type I interferon signalling.

Mapping SET1B chromatin interactions with DamID using DamMapper, a comprehensive Snakemake workflow.

Paper
BMC Genomics 2025

Wit N*, Bertlin J, Hynes-Allen A, van den Ameele J, Nathan J*. (*joint corresponding authors).

Abstract

Background: DNA adenine methyltransferase identification followed by sequencing (DamID-seq) is a powerful method used to map genome-wide chromatin-protein interactions. However, the bioinformatic analysis of DamID-seq data presents significant challenges due to the inherent complexities of the data and a notable lack of comprehensive software solutions for data-processing and downstream analysis. Results: To address these challenges, we present a comprehensive bioinformatic workflow for DamID-seq data analysis, DamMapper, using the Snakemake workflow management system. Key features include straightforward processing of multiple biological replicates, visualisation of quality control, such as correlation heatmaps and principal component analysis (PCA), and robust code quality maintained through continuous integration (CI). Reproducibility is ensured across diverse computational environments, including cloud computing and high-performance computing (HPC) clusters, through the implementation of software environments (Conda) and containerisation (Docker/Apptainer). We validate this workflow using a previously published DamID-seq dataset and apply it to analyse novel datasets for proteins involved in the hypoxia response, specifically the transcription factor HIF-1α and the histone methyltransferase SET1B. This application reveals a strong concordance between our HIF-1α DamID-seq results and ChIP-seq data, and importantly, provides the first genome-wide DNA binding map for SET1B. Conclusions: This work provides a validated, reproducible, and feature-rich workflow that overcomes common hurdles in DamID-seq data analysis. By streamlining the processing and ensuring robustness, DamMapper facilitates reliable analysis and enables new biological discoveries, as demonstrated by the characterization of SET1B binding sites. The workflow is available under an MIT license at https://github.com/niekwit/damid-seq.

Mapping the genetic landscape of iron metabolism uncovers the SETD2 methyltransferase as a modulator of iron flux

Paper
Science Advances 2025

Martinelli AW, Wu C-P, Vornbäumen T, Coates HW, Jordon LH, Wit N , Sia JJ, Speak AO, Nathan JA

Abstract

Cellular iron levels must be tightly regulated to ensure sufficient iron for essential enzymatic functions while avoiding the harmful generation of toxic species. Here, to better understand how iron levels are controlled, we carry out genome-wide mutagenesis screens in human cells. Alongside mapping known components of iron sensing, we determine the relative contributions of iron uptake, iron recycling, ferritin breakdown, and mitochondrial flux in controlling the labile iron pool. We also identify SETD2, a histone methyltransferase, as a chromatin modifying enzyme that controls intracellular iron availability through ferritin breakdown. Functionally, we show that SETD2 inhibition or cancer-associated SETD2 mutations render cells iron deficient, thereby driving resistance to ferroptosis and potentially explaining how some tumors evade antitumoral immunity.

Lipoyl deglutarylation by ABHD11 regulates mitochondrial and T cell metabolism

Paper
Nature Chemical Biology 2025

*Grice GL, *Minogue E, *Coates HW, Debela M, Kaneider-Kaser N, Antrobus PR, Johnson RS^, Nathan JA^ (*joint contributions, ^Joint senior authors)

Abstract

Glutarate is an intermediate of amino acid catabolism and an important metabolite for reprogramming T cell immunity. Glutarate exerts its effects either by directly inhibiting metabolite-dependent enzymes or through conjugation to substrates. Intriguingly, glutarylation can occur on protein and nonprotein substrates, but our understanding of these distinct glutaryl modifications is in its infancy. Here we uncover ABHD11 as a noncanonical deglutarylating enzyme critical for maintaining the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Mechanistically, we find ABHD11 removes glutaryl adducts from lipoate-an essential fatty acid modification required for the TCA cycle. Loss of ABHD11 results in the accumulation of glutaryl-lipoyl adducts that drive an adaptive program, involving 2-oxoglutarate accumulation, that rewires mitochondrial metabolism. Functionally, this role of ABHD11 influences the metabolic programming of human CD8+ T cells. Therefore, our findings reveal lipoyl glutarylation as a reversible modification that regulates the TCA cycle.

A closer look at the role of deubiquitinating enzymes in the Hypoxia Inducible Factor pathway.

Paper
Biochemical Society Transactions 2024

Pauzaite T, Nathan JA.

Abstract

Hypoxia Inducible transcription Factors (HIFs) are central to the metazoan oxygen-sensing response. Under low oxygen conditions (hypoxia), HIFs are stabilised and govern an adaptive transcriptional programme to cope with prolonged oxygen starvation. However, when oxygen is present, HIFs are continuously degraded by the proteasome in a process involving prolyl hydroxylation and subsequent ubiquitination by the Von Hippel Lindau (VHL) E3 ligase. The essential nature of VHL in the HIF response is well established but the role of other enzymes involved in ubiquitination is less clear. Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) counteract ubiquitination and provide an important regulatory aspect to many signalling pathways involving ubiquitination. In this review, we look at the complex network of ubiquitination and deubiquitination in controlling HIF signalling in normal and low oxygen tensions. We discuss the relative importance of DUBs in opposing VHL, and explore roles of DUBs more broadly in hypoxia, in both VHL and HIF independent contexts. We also consider the catalytic and non-catalytic roles of DUBs, and elaborate on the potential benefits and challenges of inhibiting these enzymes for therapeutic use.

Deubiquitinating enzyme mutagenesis screens identify a USP43-dependent HIF-1 transcriptional response

Paper
EMBO Journal 2024

Pauzaite T, Wit N, Seear RV, Nathan JA.

Abstract

The ubiquitination and proteasome-mediated degradation of Hypoxia Inducible Factors (HIFs) is central to metazoan oxygen-sensing, but the involvement of deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) in HIF signalling is less clear. Here, using a bespoke DUBs sgRNA library we conduct CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis screens to determine how DUBs are involved in HIF signalling. Alongside defining DUBs involved in HIF activation or suppression, we identify USP43 as a DUB required for efficient activation of a HIF response. USP43 is hypoxia regulated and selectively associates with the HIF-1α isoform, and while USP43 does not alter HIF-1α stability, it facilitates HIF-1 nuclear accumulation and binding to its target genes. Mechanistically, USP43 associates with 14-3-3 proteins in a hypoxia and phosphorylation dependent manner to increase the nuclear pool of HIF-1. Together, our results highlight the multifunctionality of DUBs, illustrating that they can provide important signalling functions alongside their catalytic roles.

A HIF independent oxygen-sensitive pathway for controlling cholesterol synthesis.

Paper
Nature Communications 2023

Dickson AS*, Pauzaite T*, Arnaiz E*, Ortmann BM*, West JA, Volkmar N, Martinelli AW, Li Z, Wit N, Vitkup D, Kaser A, Lehner PJ, Nathan JA (*joint contributions)

Abstract

Cholesterol biosynthesis is a highly regulated, oxygen-dependent pathway, vital for cell membrane integrity and growth. In fungi, the dependency on oxygen for sterol production has resulted in a shared transcriptional response, resembling prolyl hydroxylation of Hypoxia Inducible Factors (HIFs) in metazoans. Whether an analogous metazoan pathway exists is unknown. Here, we identify Sterol Regulatory Element Binding Protein 2 (SREBP2), the key transcription factor driving sterol production in mammals, as an oxygen-sensitive regulator of cholesterol synthesis. SREBP2 degradation in hypoxia overrides the normal sterol-sensing response, and is HIF independent. We identify MARCHF6, through its NADPH-mediated activation in hypoxia, as the main ubiquitin ligase controlling SREBP2 stability. Hypoxia-mediated degradation of SREBP2 protects cells from statin-induced cell death by forcing cells to rely on exogenous cholesterol uptake, explaining why many solid organ tumours become auxotrophic for cholesterol. Our findings therefore uncover an oxygen-sensitive pathway for governing cholesterol synthesis through regulated SREBP2-dependent protein degradation.

A Histone deacetylase 3 and mitochondrial complex I axis regulates toxic formaldehyde production.

Paper
Science Advances 2023

Wit N, Gogola E, West JA, Vornbäumen T, Seear RV, Bailey PSJ, Burgos-Barragan G, Wang M, Krawczyk P, Huberts DHEW, Gergely F, Matheson NJ, Kaser A, Nathan JA*, Patel KJ* (*Joint senior authors)

Abstract

Cells produce considerable genotoxic formaldehyde from an unknown source. We carry out a genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 genetic screen in metabolically engineered HAP1 cells that are auxotrophic for formaldehyde to find this cellular source. We identify histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) as a regulator of cellular formaldehyde production. HDAC3 regulation requires deacetylase activity, and a secondary genetic screen identifies several components of mitochondrial complex I as mediators of this regulation. Metabolic profiling indicates that this unexpected mitochondrial requirement for formaldehyde detoxification is separate from energy generation. HDAC3 and complex I therefore control the abundance of a ubiquitous genotoxic metabolite.

Nitrosylation rewires metabolism.

Paper
Nat Chem Biol 2023

Nathan JA.

Abstract

Metabolic rewiring of activated macrophages promotes glycolysis and contributes to bacterial killing. A new study shows that reactive nitrogen species, released during macrophage activation, induce a profound inhibitory signal that facilitates metabolic reprogramming by modification of lipoate.

Chromatin oxygen-sensing by histone H3 prolyl hydroxylation.

Paper
Nature Genetics 2022

Nathan JA.

Abstract

A new study identifies prolyl hydroxylation of histone H3 as a signal for the recruitment of KDM5A, altering H3K4me3 and gene expression. H3P16oh is independent of the HIF hypoxia-sensing pathway and provides a further layer of complexity to oxygen-sensitive chromatin modifications.

Metabolite-driven antitumor immunity.

Paper
Science 2022

Nathan JA.

Abstract

Otto Warburg's observations that solid organ tumors preferentially use aerobic glycolysis, metabolizing glucose to lactate, to facilitate growth paved the way for our understanding of how nutrient availability and metabolism can promote cancer. A common theme is that proliferating tumor cells use a diverse array of mechanisms to acquire nutrients to grow rather than to simply support adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. However, promoting cell growth is generally not sufficient for solid-organ tumors to develop because they must also evade cytotoxic T cells, raising the question of whether this immune evasion is linked to metabolism. On page 1519 of this issue, Notarangelo et al. show that d-2-hydroxyglutarate (d-2HG), a metabolite secreted by tumors with mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH), functions within the tumor microenvironment (TME) to impair CD8+ T cell-mediated tumor cell killing. These findings highlight the potential for metabolites within the TME to alter antitumor immune responses.

The HIF complex recruits the histone methyltransferase SET1B to activate specific hypoxia-inducible genes.

Paper
Nature Genetics 2021

Ortmann BM, Burrows N, Lobb IT, Arnaiz E, Wit N, Bailey PSJ, Jordon LH, Lombardi O, Peñalver A, McCaffrey J, Seear R, Mole DR, Ratcliffe PJ, Maxwell PH, Nathan JA

Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs) are fundamental to cellular adaptation to low oxygen levels, but it is unclear how they interact with chromatin and activate their target genes. Here, we use genome-wide mutagenesis to identify genes involved in HIF transcriptional activity, and define a requirement for the histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methyltransferase SET1B. SET1B loss leads to a selective reduction in transcriptional activation of HIF target genes, resulting in impaired cell growth, angiogenesis and tumor establishment in SET1B-deficient xenografts. Mechanistically, we show that SET1B accumulates on chromatin in hypoxia, and is recruited to HIF target genes by the HIF complex. The selective induction of H3K4 trimethylation at HIF target loci is both HIF- and SET1B-dependent and, when impaired, correlates with decreased promoter acetylation and gene expression. Together, these findings show SET1B as a determinant of site-specific histone methylation and provide insight into how HIF target genes are differentially regulated.

Genetic approaches to understand cellular responses to oxygen availability.

Paper
The FEBS journal 2021

Ortmann BM, Nathan JA

Abstract

Oxygen-sensing mechanisms have evolved to allow organisms to respond and adapt to oxygen availability. In metazoans, oxygen-sensing is predominantly mediated by the hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs). These transcription factors are stabilised when oxygen is limiting, activating genes involved in angiogenesis, cell growth, pH regulation and metabolism to reset cell function and adapt to the cellular environment. However, the recognition that other cellular pathways and enzymes can also respond to changes in oxygen abundance provides further complexity. Dissecting this interplay of oxygen-sensing mechanisms has been a key research goal. Here, we review how genetic approaches have contributed to our knowledge of oxygen-sensing pathways which to date have been predominantly focused on the HIF pathway. We discuss how genetic studies have advanced the field and outline the implications and limitations of such approaches for the development of therapies targeting oxygen-sensing mechanisms in human disease.

ABHD11 maintains 2-oxoglutarate metabolism by preserving functional lipoylation of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex.

Paper
Nature Communications 2020

Bailey PSJ, Ortmann BM, Martinelli AW, Houghton JW, Costa ASH, Burr SP, Antrobus R, Frezza C, Nathan JA.

Abstract

2-oxoglutarate (2-OG or α-ketoglutarate) relates mitochondrial metabolism to cell function by modulating the activity of 2-OG dependent dioxygenases involved in the hypoxia response and DNA/histone modifications. However, metabolic pathways that regulate these oxygen and 2-OG sensitive enzymes remain poorly understood. Here, using CRISPR Cas9 genome-wide mutagenesis to screen for genetic determinants of 2-OG levels, we uncover a redox sensitive mitochondrial lipoylation pathway, dependent on the mitochondrial hydrolase ABHD11, that signals changes in mitochondrial 2-OG metabolism to 2-OG dependent dioxygenase function. ABHD11 loss or inhibition drives a rapid increase in 2-OG levels by impairing lipoylation of the 2-OG dehydrogenase complex (OGDHc)—the rate limiting step for mitochondrial 2-OG metabolism. Rather than facilitating lipoate conjugation, ABHD11 associates with the OGDHc and maintains catalytic activity of lipoyl domain by preventing the formation of lipoyl adducts, highlighting ABHD11 as a regulator of functional lipoylation and 2-OG metabolism.

Squalene and cholesterol in the balance at the ER membrane.

Paper
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2020

Nathan JA.

MARCH6 and TRC8 facilitate the quality control of cytosolic and tail anchored proteins

Paper
EMBO Reports 2018

Stefanovic-Barrett S, Dickson AS, Burr SP, Williamson JC, Lobb IT, van den Boomen DJH, Lehner PJ, and Nathan JA

Abstract

Misfolded or damaged proteins are typically targeted for destruction by proteasome-mediated degradation, but the mammalian ubiquitin machinery involved is incompletely understood. Here, using forward genetic screens in human cells, we find that the proteasome-mediated degradation of the soluble misfolded reporter, mCherry-CL1, involves two ER-resident E3 ligases, MARCH6 and TRC8. mCherry-CL1 degradation is routed via the ER membrane and dependent on the hydrophobicity of the substrate, with complete stabilisation only observed in double knockout MARCH6/TRC8 cells. To identify a more physiological correlate, we used quantitative mass spectrometry and found that TRC8 and MARCH6 depletion altered the turnover of the tail-anchored protein heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). These E3 ligases associate with the intramembrane cleaving signal peptide peptidase (SPP) and facilitate the degradation of HO-1 following intramembrane proteolysis. Our results highlight how ER-resident ligases may target the same substrates, but work independently of each other, to optimise the protein quality control of selected soluble and tail-anchored proteins.

The vacuolar-ATPase complex and assembly factors, TMEM199 and CCDC115, control HIF1alpha prolyl hydroxylation by regulating cellular iron levels

Paper
elife 2017

Miles AL*, Burr SP*, Grice GL, and Nathan JA

Abstract

Hypoxia Inducible transcription Factors (HIFs) are principally regulated by the 2-oxoglutarate and Iron(II) prolyl hydroxylase (PHD) enzymes, which hydroxylate the HIFα subunit, facilitating its proteasome-mediated degradation. Observations that HIFα hydroxylation can be impaired even when oxygen is sufficient emphasise the importance of understanding the complex nature of PHD regulation. Here, we use an unbiased genome-wide genetic screen in near-haploid human cells to uncover cellular processes that regulate HIF1α. We identify that genetic disruption of the Vacuolar H+ ATPase (V-ATPase), the key proton pump for endo-lysosomal acidification, and two previously uncharacterised V-ATPase assembly factors, TMEM199 and CCDC115, stabilise HIF1α in aerobic conditions. Rather than preventing the lysosomal degradation of HIF1α, disrupting the V-ATPase results in intracellular iron depletion, thereby impairing PHD activity and leading to HIF activation. Iron supplementation directly restores PHD catalytic activity following V-ATPase inhibition, revealing important links between the V-ATPase, iron metabolism and HIFs.

Mitochondrial protein lipoylation and the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex controls HIF1α stability in aerobic conditions.

Paper
Cell Metabolism 2016

Burr SP, Costa ASH, Grice GL, Timms RT, Lobb IT, Freisigner P, Dodd RB, Dougan G, Lehner PJ, Frezza C, and Nathan JA.

Abstract

Hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs) control adaptation to low oxygen environments by activating genes involved in metabolism, angiogenesis, and redox homeostasis. The finding that HIFs are also regulated by small molecule metabolites highlights the need to understand the complexity of their cellular regulation. Here we use a forward genetic screen in near-haploid human cells to identify genes that stabilize HIFs under aerobic conditions. We identify two mitochondrial genes, oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (OGDH) and lipoic acid synthase (LIAS), which when mutated stabilize HIF1α in a non-hydroxylated form. Disruption of OGDH complex activity in OGDH or LIAS mutants promotes L-2-hydroxyglutarate formation, which inhibits the activity of the HIFα prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs) and TET 2-oxoglutarate dependent dioxygenases. We also find that PHD activity is decreased in patients with homozygous germline mutations in lipoic acid synthesis, leading to HIF1 activation. Thus, mutations affecting OGDHC activity may have broad implications for epigenetic regulation and tumorigenesis.

The proteasome distinguishes between heterotypic and homotypic lysine-11 linked polyubiquitin chains

Paper
Cell Reports 2015

Grice GL, Lobb IT, Weekes MP, Gygi SP, Antrobus R, and Nathan JA.

Abstract

Proteasome-mediated degradation occurs with proteins principally modified with lysine-48 polyubiquitin chains. Whether the proteasome also can bind atypical ubiquitin chains, including those linked by lysine-11, has not been well established. This is critically important, as lysine-11 polyubiquitination has been implicated in both proteasome-mediated degradation and non-degradative outcomes. Here we demonstrate that pure homotypic lysine-11-linked chains do not bind strongly to the mammalian proteasome. By contrast, heterotypic polyubiquitin chains, containing lysine-11 and lysine-48 linkages, not only bind to the proteasome but also stimulate the proteasomal degradation of the cell-cycle regulator cyclin B1. Thus, while heterotypic lysine-11-linked chains facilitate proteasomal degradation, homotypic lysine-11 linkages adopt conformations that prevent association with the proteasome. Our data demonstrate the capacity of the proteasome to bind ubiquitin chains of distinct topology, with implications for the recognition and diverse biological functions of mixed ubiquitin chains.