RAS、BCR-ABL 和 MYC 驱动的淋巴恶性肿瘤中脂肪生成的代谢趋同。

IF 6 3区 医学 Q1 CELL BIOLOGY Cancer & Metabolism Pub Date : 2021-08-16 DOI:10.1186/s40170-021-00263-8
Daniel F Liefwalker, Meital Ryan, Zhichao Wang, Khyatiben V Pathak, Seema Plaisier, Vidhi Shah, Bobby Babra, Gabrielle S Dewson, Ian K Lai, Adriane R Mosley, Patrick T Fueger, Stephanie C Casey, Lei Jiang, Patrick Pirrotte, Srividya Swaminathan, Rosalie C Sears
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:代谢重编程是许多癌症亚型的核心特征,也是癌症的标志。许多治疗策略都试图利用这一特点,但往往会对正常代谢程序产生意想不到的副作用,而且由于代谢底物来源的综合性,疗效有限。虽然致癌病灶可能各不相同,但淋巴恶性肿瘤的肿瘤细胞往往具有相似的环境和潜在的相似代谢特征。我们对 MYC、RAS 和 BCR-ABL 驱动的淋巴恶性肿瘤小鼠模型的细胞进行了研究,发现它们在新生脂肪生成方面存在趋同性。我们通过 13C 葡萄糖追踪和非靶向代谢分析,探讨了 MYC 在介导脂肪生成中的潜在作用。抑制脂肪生成会导致体外和体内细胞死亡,但不会诱导正常脾细胞死亡:我们分析了 RNA-seq 数据集,以寻找淋巴瘤和白血病的共同代谢趋同点。利用从条件性 MYC、RAS 和 BCR-ABL 转基因小鼠模型和癌基因驱动的人类细胞系中提取的体外细胞系,我们确定了淋巴恶性肿瘤的基因调控、代谢特征以及对抑制脂肪生成的敏感性。我们利用临床前小鼠模型和 T-ALL 的转基因原代模型来确定阻断脂肪生成对 BCR-ABL、RAS 和 c-MYC 驱动的淋巴恶性肿瘤的影响。采用非配对t检验和单因素方差分析计算统计意义:这项研究表明,新的脂质生物生成是几种淋巴瘤亚型的共同特征。利用从条件性MYC、RAS和BCR-ABL转基因小鼠模型中提取的细胞系,我们证明了乙酰-CoA羧化酶抑制剂5-(十四烷氧基)-2-呋喃酸(TOFA)和其他脂肪生成抑制剂抑制脂肪生成的共同反应。我们进行了代谢追踪研究,以确认 c-MYC 和 TOFA 对脂肪生成的影响。我们确定了体外和体内细胞对 TOFA 的特异性死亡反应,并证明了移植淋巴瘤细胞系在体内的移植和进展延迟。我们还在原代转基因小鼠模型中观察到,服用 TOFA 后,T-ALL 的进展延迟。在一组人类细胞系中,我们证明了对 TOFA 治疗的敏感性,这是由于 MYC、RAS 或 BCR-ABL 驱动的淋巴恶性肿瘤普遍趋向于新生脂肪生成的代谢责任。重要的是,在体内非恶性细胞中没有观察到明显的细胞死亡现象:这些研究表明,新生脂肪生成可能是许多淋巴恶性肿瘤的常见生存策略,也可能是临床上可利用的代谢责任:本研究不包括对人体的任何临床干预。
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Metabolic convergence on lipogenesis in RAS, BCR-ABL, and MYC-driven lymphoid malignancies.

Background: Metabolic reprogramming is a central feature in many cancer subtypes and a hallmark of cancer. Many therapeutic strategies attempt to exploit this feature, often having unintended side effects on normal metabolic programs and limited efficacy due to integrative nature of metabolic substrate sourcing. Although the initiating oncogenic lesion may vary, tumor cells in lymphoid malignancies often share similar environments and potentially similar metabolic profiles. We examined cells from mouse models of MYC-, RAS-, and BCR-ABL-driven lymphoid malignancies and find a convergence on de novo lipogenesis. We explore the potential role of MYC in mediating lipogenesis by 13C glucose tracing and untargeted metabolic profiling. Inhibition of lipogenesis leads to cell death both in vitro and in vivo and does not induce cell death of normal splenocytes.

Methods: We analyzed RNA-seq data sets for common metabolic convergence in lymphoma and leukemia. Using in vitro cell lines derived in from conditional MYC, RAS, and BCR-ABL transgenic murine models and oncogene-driven human cell lines, we determined gene regulation, metabolic profiles, and sensitivity to inhibition of lipogenesis in lymphoid malignancies. We utilize preclinical murine models and transgenic primary model of T-ALL to determine the effect of lipogenesis blockade across BCR-ABL-, RAS-, and c-MYC-driven lymphoid malignancies. Statistical significance was calculated using unpaired t-tests and one-way ANOVA.

Results: This study illustrates that de novo lipid biogenesis is a shared feature of several lymphoma subtypes. Using cell lines derived from conditional MYC, RAS, and BCR-ABL transgenic murine models, we demonstrate shared responses to inhibition of lipogenesis by the acetyl-coA carboxylase inhibitor 5-(tetradecloxy)-2-furic acid (TOFA), and other lipogenesis inhibitors. We performed metabolic tracing studies to confirm the influence of c-MYC and TOFA on lipogenesis. We identify specific cell death responses to TOFA in vitro and in vivo and demonstrate delayed engraftment and progression in vivo in transplanted lymphoma cell lines. We also observe delayed progression of T-ALL in a primary transgenic mouse model upon TOFA administration. In a panel of human cell lines, we demonstrate sensitivity to TOFA treatment as a metabolic liability due to the general convergence on de novo lipogenesis in lymphoid malignancies driven by MYC, RAS, or BCR-ABL. Importantly, cell death was not significantly observed in non-malignant cells in vivo.

Conclusions: These studies suggest that de novo lipogenesis may be a common survival strategy for many lymphoid malignancies and may be a clinically exploitable metabolic liability.

Trial registration: This study does not include any clinical interventions on human subjects.

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来源期刊
自引率
1.70%
发文量
17
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Cancer & Metabolism welcomes studies on all aspects of the relationship between cancer and metabolism, including: -Molecular biology and genetics of cancer metabolism -Whole-body metabolism, including diabetes and obesity, in relation to cancer -Metabolomics in relation to cancer; -Metabolism-based imaging -Preclinical and clinical studies of metabolism-related cancer therapies.
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