scholarly journals A synthetic lethal drug combination mimics glucose deprivation–induced cancer cell death in the presence of glucose

2019 ◽  
Vol 295 (5) ◽  
pp. 1350-1365 ◽  
Author(s):  
James H. Joly ◽  
Alireza Delfarah ◽  
Philip S. Phung ◽  
Sydney Parrish ◽  
Nicholas A. Graham

Metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells can increase their dependence on metabolic substrates such as glucose. As such, the vulnerability of cancer cells to glucose deprivation creates an attractive opportunity for therapeutic intervention. Because it is not possible to starve tumors of glucose in vivo, here we sought to identify the mechanisms in glucose deprivation–induced cancer cell death and then designed inhibitor combinations to mimic glucose deprivation–induced cell death. Using metabolomic profiling, we found that cells undergoing glucose deprivation–induced cell death exhibited dramatic accumulation of intracellular l-cysteine and its oxidized dimer, l-cystine, and depletion of the antioxidant GSH. Building on this observation, we show that glucose deprivation–induced cell death is driven not by the lack of glucose, but rather by l-cystine import. Following glucose deprivation, the import of l-cystine and its subsequent reduction to l-cysteine depleted both NADPH and GSH pools, thereby allowing toxic accumulation of reactive oxygen species. Consistent with this model, we found that the glutamate/cystine antiporter (xCT) is required for increased sensitivity to glucose deprivation. We searched for glycolytic enzymes whose expression is essential for the survival of cancer cells with high xCT expression and identified glucose transporter type 1 (GLUT1). Testing a drug combination that co-targeted GLUT1 and GSH synthesis, we found that this combination induces synthetic lethal cell death in high xCT-expressing cell lines susceptible to glucose deprivation. These results indicate that co-targeting GLUT1 and GSH synthesis may offer a potential therapeutic approach for targeting tumors dependent on glucose for survival.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
James H. Joly ◽  
Alireza Delfarah ◽  
Philip S. Phung ◽  
Sydney Parrish ◽  
Nicholas A. Graham

AbstractThe consequences of metabolic reprogramming in cancer can include an increased dependence on metabolic substrates such as glucose for survival. As such, the vulnerability of cancer cells to glucose deprivation creates an attractive opportunity for therapeutic intervention. Because it is not possible to starve tumors of glucose in vivo, we sought to identify the mechanisms regulating cancer cell death upon glucose deprivation and then design combinations of inhibitors to mimic glucose deprivation-induced cell death. Using metabolomic profiling, we found that cells undergoing glucose deprivation-induced cell death exhibited dramatic accumulation of intracellular L-cysteine and its oxidized dimer, L-cystine, and depletion of the antioxidant glutathione. Building on this observation, we show that glucose deprivation-induced cell death is driven not by lack of glucose but rather by L-cystine import. Following glucose deprivation, the import of L-cystine and subsequent reduction to L-cysteine depleted both NADPH and glutathione, thereby allowing toxic accumulation of reactive oxygen species. Consistent with this model, we found that the glutamate/cystine antiporter, xCT, was required for sensitivity to glucose deprivation. We searched for glycolytic enzymes whose expression is essential for survival of cancer cells with high xCT expression and identified the glucose transporter GLUT1. We therefore tested a drug combination co-targeting GLUT1 and glutathione synthesis and found that these drugs induced synthetic lethal cell death in high xCT-expressing cell lines susceptible to glucose deprivation. These results indicate that co-targeting GLUT1 and glutathione synthesis is a potential therapeutic approach in tumors dependent on glucose for survival.


2020 ◽  
Vol 295 (5) ◽  
pp. 1350-1365
Author(s):  
James H. Joly ◽  
Alireza Delfarah ◽  
Philip S. Phung ◽  
Sydney Parrish ◽  
Nicholas A. Graham

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 4716-4716 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aysenur Esen ◽  
Anwar A Khan ◽  
Jason Chan ◽  
Nadim Mahmud ◽  
John G. Quigley

Abstract Introduction: Metabolic reprogramming by cancer cells to allow proliferation and survival suggests targeting of relatively cancer cell-specific metabolic processes as a potential cancer therapy. The amino acid (aa) glutamine (GLN) functions as an exchange factor to facilitate cell import of essential amino acids (EAA), which positively regulate translation by the mTORC1 pathway (via phosphorylation of S70K and 4EBP1), allowing proliferation. Most cancer cells also rely on GLN, rather than glucose for citric acid cycle (TCA) anaplerosis, and as a source of energy, anti-oxidants and components for protein synthesis. L-asparaginase (L-Ase), an enzyme that breaks down extracellular asparagine (ASN, the least prevalent intracellular aa), is used in the treatment of ALL. L-Ase is also glutaminolytic, resulting in GLN depletion and apoptosis that is suppressed by ASN repletion, which modulates the cell stress responses (ISR, upregulatingATF4, CHOP, aa transporters, and asparagine synthetase (ASNS)). Thus, (i) ASN is a critical signal preventing cell death from GLN depletion; (ii) ASN repletion (via ASNS) may be the important function of GLN within cancer cells, and (iii) mechanisms that deplete bothkey aa may be synergistic in implementing cancer cell death Apart from non-EAA synthesis and aa uptake (#1 in Fig. 1A), there are two major pathways of cellular aa repletion: (i) autophagy, a process whereby damaged proteins are delivered to the lysosome for degradation (#2), and (ii) the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS, #3), which also degrades damaged or misfolded cell proteins, allowing aa recycling. Notably, UPS inhibition significantly decreases ASN (andcystine) levels. The aim of our studies is to explore mechanisms of depleting intracellular GLN and ASN levels in cancer cells, firstinvestigating the potential synergistic effects of combining L-Ase, with Chloroquine (CQ, autophagy inhibition) and Bortezomib (BTZ, proteasome inhibition), and then analyzing cancer cell counter mechanisms. Results: We performed kill-curves with individual drugs, and then combinations of L-ase, CQ and BTZ in REH (ALL) cells. Notably, inhibitory effects on aarepletion pathways, as determined by western blot analysis of cell lysates at 12h (Fig. 1B), were seen with a combination of significantly lowered doses of each drug [BTZ 2nM (40% of LD50); L-Ase 0.2IU (15%); CQ 100mM (50%)]. The mTORC1 pathway is especially susceptible to inhibition by drug combination-mediated aa depletion (decreased phosphorylation of 4EBP1 and S6K1; compare lanes 2-4 & 5-8), while autophagy (monitored by increasing levels of LC3-II) is also inhibited. Cell viability was assessed after 48h. Although the low doses of each drug used has a minimal impact on viability (range 75-130% of control), the combination above (2nM;0.2IU;100mM) results in synergistic cell death [55% (n = 1)]. We will examine further the effects of this drug combination on normal CD34+ cells, prior to studies of efficacy inxeno-transplant models. Most tumors are metabolically flexible, e.g., they can use glucose if deprived of GLN to replenish TCA, and, via TCA intermediates, increase GLN levels, and thereby ASN, via pyruvate carboxylase (PC), transaminases (GOT1, 2), glutaminesynthetases(GDH, GS) and ASNS (see Fig. 1 pathways). Thus, we interrogated, byqPCR, potentially relevant pathways that may be used to evade glutamine and asparagine depletion-induced apoptosis (Fig. 1C). Of 12 genes tested, GLN deprivation significantlyupregulatesGLS1, GOT1, and ASNS to increase ASN levels, while the ISR is activated (CHOP), and SLC7A11, a cysteine importer upregulated in tumors (for glutathione production) is also significantly upregulated. Preliminary studies of REH and A549 (lung cancer) cells suggest a common theme in metabolic responses to GLN depletion in diverse cancer cells is ASN synthesis through GOT1 and ASNS upregulation, and likely ROS production throughcystineuptake. Conclusions: Commonly, inhibition of one metabolic pathway results in upregulation of another. Our studies indicate that combination therapy, using low doses of available, well-studied drugs depletes keyaa ASN and GLN, and prevents their repletion, causing cancer cell death. In addition, our studies of the cellular responses to GLN depletion alone indicate additional targets that should be considered to prevent ASN-mediated inhibition of cell death in diverse cancer types. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Biomedicines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 1101
Author(s):  
Mei-Chun Chen ◽  
Li-Lin Hsu ◽  
Sheng-Fan Wang ◽  
Yi-Ling Pan ◽  
Jeng-Fan Lo ◽  
...  

Cancer cells have the metabolic flexibility to adapt to heterogeneous tumor microenvironments. The integrated stress response (ISR) regulates the cellular adaptation response during nutrient stress. However, the issue of how the ISR regulates metabolic flexibility is still poorly understood. In this study, we activated the ISR using salubrinal in cancer cells and found that salubrinal repressed cell growth, colony formation, and migration but did not induce cell death in a glucose-containing condition. Under a glucose-deprivation condition, salubrinal induced cell death and increased the levels of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS). We found that these effects of salubrinal and glucose deprivation were associated with the upregulation of xCT (SLC7A11), which functions as an antiporter of cystine and glutamate and maintains the level of glutathione to maintain redox homeostasis. The upregulation of xCT did not protect cells from oxidative stress-mediated cell death but promoted it during glucose deprivation. In addition, the supplementation of ROS scavenger N-acetylcysteine and the maintenance of intracellular levels of amino acids via sulfasalazine (xCT inhibitor) or dimethyl-α-ketoglutarate decreased the levels of mitochondrial ROS and protected cells from death. Our results suggested that salubrinal enhances cancer cell death during glucose deprivation through the upregulation of xCT and mitochondrial oxidative stress.


2012 ◽  
Vol 109 (38) ◽  
pp. 15115-15120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Drew J. Adams ◽  
Mingji Dai ◽  
Giovanni Pellegrino ◽  
Bridget K. Wagner ◽  
Andrew M. Stern ◽  
...  

Piperlongumine is a naturally occurring small molecule recently identified to be toxic selectively to cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. This compound was found to elevate cellular levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) selectively in cancer cell lines. The synthesis of 80 piperlongumine analogs has revealed structural modifications that retain, enhance, and ablate key piperlongumine-associated effects on cells, including elevation of ROS, cancer cell death, and selectivity for cancer cells over nontransformed cell types. Structure/activity relationships suggest that the electrophilicity of the C2-C3 olefin is critical for the observed effects on cells. Furthermore, we show that analogs lacking a reactive C7-C8 olefin can elevate ROS to levels observed with piperlongumine but show markedly reduced cell death, suggesting that ROS-independent mechanisms, including cellular cross-linking events, may also contribute to piperlongumine’s induction of apoptosis. In particular, we have identified irreversible protein glutathionylation as a process associated with cellular toxicity. We propose a mechanism of action for piperlongumine that may be relevant to other small molecules having two sites of reactivity, one with greater and the other with lesser electrophilicity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wooram Park ◽  
Seok-Jo Kim ◽  
Paul Cheresh ◽  
Jeanho Yun ◽  
Byeongdu Lee ◽  
...  

Mitochondria are crucial regulators of the intrinsic pathway of cancer cell death. The high sensitivity of cancer cells to mitochondrial dysfunction offers opportunities for emerging targets in cancer therapy. Herein,...


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 3610
Author(s):  
Valeria De Matteis ◽  
Mariafrancesca Cascione ◽  
Loris Rizzello ◽  
Daniela Erminia Manno ◽  
Claudia Di Guglielmo ◽  
...  

Background: In recent decades, gold nanoparticle (Au NP)-based cancer therapy has been heavily debated. The physico-chemical properties of AuNPs can be exploited in photothermal therapy, making them a powerful tool for selectively killing cancer cells. However, the synthetic side products and capping agents often induce a strong activation of the inflammatory pathways of macrophages, thus limiting their further applications in vivo. Methods: Here, we described a green method to obtain stable polyphenol-capped AuNPs (Au NPs@polyphenols), as polyphenols are known for their anti-inflammatory and anticancer properties. These NPs were used in human macrophages to test key inflammation-related markers, such as NF-κB, TNF-α, and interleukins-6 and 8. The results were compared with similar NPs obtained by a traditional chemical route (without the polyphenol coating), proving the potential of Au NPs@polyphenols to strongly promote the shutdown of inflammation. This was useful in developing them for use as heat-synergized tools in the thermal treatment of two types of cancer cells, namely, breast cancer (MCF-7) and neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cells. The cell viability, calcium release, oxidative stress, HSP-70 expression, mitochondrial, and DNA damage, as well as cytoskeleton alteration, were evaluated. Results: Our results clearly demonstrate that the combined strategy markedly exerts anticancer effects against the tested cancer cell, while neither of the single treatments (only heat or only NPs) induced significant changes. Conclusions: Au NP@polyphenols may be powerful agents in cancer treatment.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyemi Lee ◽  
Eun-Taex Oh ◽  
Bo-Hwa Choi ◽  
Moon-Taek Park ◽  
Ja-Kyeong Lee ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Justyna Mączyńska ◽  
Chiara Da Pieve ◽  
Thomas A. Burley ◽  
Florian Raes ◽  
Anant Shah ◽  
...  

Abstract There is an urgent need to develop therapeutic approaches that can increase the response rate to immuno-oncology agents. Photoimmunotherapy has recently been shown to generate anti-tumour immunological responses by releasing tumour-associated antigens from ablated tumour cell residues, thereby enhancing antigenicity and adjuvanticity. Here, we investigate the feasibility of a novel HER2-targeted affibody-based conjugate (ZHER2:2395-IR700) selectively to induce cancer cell death in vitro and in vivo. The studies in vitro confirmed the specificity of ZHER2:2395-IR700 binding to HER2-positive cells and its ability to produce reactive oxygen species upon light irradiation. A conjugate concentration- and light irradiation-dependent decrease in cell viability was also demonstrated. Furthermore, light-activated ZHER2:2395-IR700 triggered all hallmarks of immunogenic cell death, as defined by the translocation of calreticulin to the cell surface, and the secretion of ATP, HSP70/90 and HMGB1 from dying cancer cells into the medium. Irradiating a co-culture of immature dendritic cells (DCs) and cancer cells exposed to light-activated ZHER2:2395-IR700 enhanced DC maturation, as indicated by augmented expression of CD86 and HLA-DR. In SKOV-3 xenografts, the ZHER2:2395-IR700-based phototherapy delayed tumour growth and increased median overall survival. Collectively, our results strongly suggest that ZHER2:2395-IR700 is a promising new therapeutic conjugate that has great potential to be applicable for photoimmunotherapy-based regimens.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document