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Sensing of extracellular l-proline availability by the integrated stress response determines the outcome of cell competition.

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posted on 2025-07-14, 11:19 authored by Shruthi Krishnan, Ana Lima, Sizhe Tan, Ying Thong Low, Salvador Perez Montero, Aida Di Gregorio, Adrian Perez Barreto, Sarah Bowling, Karen Vousden, Tristan A Rodriguez
Cell competition is a conserved fitness quality control that eliminates cells that are less fit than their neighbors. How winner cells induce the elimination of losers is poorly understood. We tackle this question by studying the onset of embryonic differentiation in mice, where cell competition eliminates 35% of embryonic cells. These loser cells have mitochondrial dysfunction, which we show causes amino acid deprivation and activation of the integrated stress response (ISR), a pathway essential for their survival. We demonstrate that l-proline is a key amino acid sensed by the ISR and that proline represses the ISR and drives their elimination. These results indicate that cell competition acts as a previously unidentified tissue-sparing mechanism, regulated by the availability of extracellular amino acids, that allows for the elimination of dysfunctional cells when amino acids are plentiful but ensures their survival in nutrient-poor environments.

Funding

Crick (Grant ID: CC2073, Grant title: Vousden CC2073) European Research Council (Grant ID: 101020641 - PancObese, Grant title: ERC 101020641 - PancObese) Cancer Research UK (Grant ID: 26855, Grant title: CRUK C596/A26855)

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