As the result of genetic alterations and tumor hypoxia, many cancer cells avidly take up glucose and generate lactate through lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA), which is encoded by a target gene of c-Myc and hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1). Previous studies with reduction of LDHA expression indicate that LDHA is involved in tumor initiation, but its role in tumor maintenance and progression has not been established. Furthermore, how reduction of LDHA expression by interference or antisense RNA inhibits tumorigenesis is not well understood. Here, we report that reduction of LDHA by siRNA or its inhibition by a small-molecule inhibitor (FX11 [3-dihydroxy-6-methyl-7-(phenylmethyl)-4-propylnaphthalene-1-carboxylic acid]) reduced ATP levels and induced significant oxidative stress and cell death that could be partially reversed by the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine. Furthermore, we document that FX11 inhibited the progression of sizable human lymphoma and pancreatic cancer xenografts. When used in combination with the NAD + synthesis inhibitor FK866, FX11 induced lymphoma regression. Hence, inhibition of LDHA with FX11 is an achievable and tolerable treatment for LDHA-dependent tumors. Our studies document a therapeutical approach to the Warburg effect and demonstrate that oxidative stress and metabolic phenotyping of cancers are critical aspects of cancer biology to consider for the therapeutical targeting of cancer energy metabolism.glycolysis | lymphoma | pancreatic cancer | redox stress | xenograft models
Summary Because MYC plays a causal role in many human cancers, including those with hypoxic and nutrient-poor tumor microenvironments, we have determined the metabolic responses of a MYC-inducible human Burkitt lymphoma model P493 cell line to aerobic and hypoxic conditions, and to glucose deprivation, using Stable Isotope Resolved Metabolomics. Using [U-13C]-glucose as the tracer, both glucose consumption and lactate production were increased by MYC expression and hypoxia. Using [U-13C,15N]-glutamine as the tracer, glutamine import and metabolism through the TCA cycle persisted under hypoxia, and glutamine contributed significantly to citrate carbons. Under glucose deprivation, glutamine-derived fumarate, malate, and citrate were significantly increased. Their 13C labeling patterns demonstrate an alternative energy-generating glutaminolysis pathway involving a glucose-independent TCA cycle. The essential role of glutamine metabolism in cell survival and proliferation under hypoxia and glucose deficiency, makes them susceptible to the glutaminase inhibitor BPTES, and hence could be targeted for cancer therapy.
The MYC oncogene codes for a transcription factor that is overexpressed in many human cancers. Here we show that MYC regulates the expression of two immune checkpoint proteins on the tumor cell surface, the innate immune regulator, CD47 (Cluster of Differentiation 47) and the adaptive immune checkpoint, PD-L1 (programmed death-ligand 1). Suppression of MYC in mouse tumors and human tumor cells caused a reduction in the levels of CD47 and PD-L1 mRNA and protein. MYC was found to bind directly to the promoters of the CD47 and PD-L1 genes. MYC inactivation in mouse tumors downregulated CD47 and PD-L1 expression and enhanced the anti-tumor immune response. In contrast, when MYC was inactivated in tumors with enforced expression of CD47 or PD-L1, the immune response was suppressed and tumors continued to grow. Thus MYC appears to initiate and maintain tumorigenesis in part through the modulation of immune regulatory molecules.
Summary The MYC oncogene encodes MYC, a transcription factor that binds the genome through sites termed E-boxes (5′-CACGTG-3′), which are identical to the binding sites of the heterodimeric CLOCK-BMAL1 master circadian transcription factor. Hence, we hypothesized that ectopic MYC expression perturbs the clock by deregulating E-box-driven components of the circadian network in cancer cells. We report here that deregulated expression of MYC or N-MYC disrupts the molecular clock in vitro by directly inducing REV-ERBα to dampen expression and oscillation of BMAL1, and this could be rescued by knockdown of REV-ERB. REV-ERBα expression predicts poor clinical outcome for N-MYC-driven human neuroblastomas that have diminished BMAL1 expression, and reexpression of ectopic BMAL1 in neuroblastoma cell lines suppresses their clonogenicity. Further, ectopic MYC profoundly alters oscillation of glucose metabolism and perturbs glutaminolysis. Our results demonstrate an unsuspected link between oncogenic transformation and circadian and metabolic dysrhythmia, which we surmise to be advantageous for cancer.
The MYC oncogene is frequently mutated and overexpressed in human renal cell carcinoma (RCC). However, there have been no studies on the causative role of MYC or any other oncogene in the initiation or maintenance of kidney tumorigenesis. Here, we show through a conditional transgenic mouse model that the MYC oncogene, but not the RAS oncogene, initiates and maintains RCC. Desorption electrospray ionization-mass-spectrometric imaging was used to obtain chemical maps of metabolites and lipids in the mouse RCC samples. Gene expression analysis revealed that the mouse tumors mimicked human RCC. The data suggested that MYC-induced RCC up-regulated the glutaminolytic pathway instead of the glycolytic pathway. The pharmacologic inhibition of glutamine metabolism with bis-2-(5-phenylacetamido-1,2,4-thiadiazol-2-yl) ethyl sulfide impeded MYC-mediated RCC tumor progression. Our studies demonstrate that MYC overexpression causes RCC and points to the inhibition of glutamine metabolism as a potential therapeutic approach for the treatment of this disease.MYC oncogene | renal cell carcinoma | desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging | glutamine metabolism R enal cell adenocarcinoma (RCC) is a kidney cancer that originates in the lining of the proximal convoluted tubule, a part of the very small tubes in the kidney that transport waste molecules from the blood to the urine. Most patients who present with advanced RCC have a dismal prognosis because RCC easily metastasizes and advances in therapy have been limited (1-3). A lack of transgenic models of RCC has made it difficult to identify and test new therapeutic modalities.The MYC pathway is activated in most cases of human RCC (4), genomically amplified in 5-10% of patients, overexpressed in 20% (5), and associated with a hereditary RCC syndrome (6) suggesting a causal role in the pathogenesis, but this has never been examined. Here, we report the development of a conditional transgenic mouse model for MYC-deregulated human RCC. The MYC oncogene contributes to tumorigenesis of many types of cancer through various mechanisms (7-10), including the regulation of proliferation and growth, protein and ribosomal biogenesis, changes in metabolism, lipid synthesis, and induction of angiogenesis (11)(12)(13)(14). MYC reprogramming can result in tumors that are addicted to glucose and/or glutamine for their energy metabolism (15-19). MYC directly regulates specific genes of the glycolytic and glutaminolytic pathways (15,17,20,21), including lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA), glucose transporter 1 (Glut1), hexokinase 2 (HK2), phosphofructokinase-M 1 (PFKM1), and enolase 1 (Eno1) (21-23). Also, MYC coordinates genes involved in glutamine catabolism (SI MYC and Glutamine Catabolism). However, there has been no evidence to show that MYC overexpression directly drives and maintains RCC or how this occurs.Through our new transgenic mouse model, we showed that transgenic MYC, but not mutant RAS, overexpression in vivo rapidly initiates a highly aggressive RCC that histologi...
Metabolic reprogramming is a prominent feature of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). Here we investigated metabolic dependencies in a panel of ccRCC cell lines using nutrient depletion, functional RNAi screening and inhibitor treatment. We found that ccRCC cells are highly sensitive to the depletion of glutamine or cystine, two amino acids required for glutathione (GSH) synthesis. Moreover, silencing of enzymes of the GSH biosynthesis pathway or glutathione peroxidases, which depend on GSH for the removal of cellular hydroperoxides, selectively reduced viability of ccRCC cells but did not affect the growth of non-malignant renal epithelial cells. Inhibition of GSH synthesis triggered ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death associated with enhanced lipid peroxidation. VHL is a major tumour suppressor in ccRCC and loss of VHL leads to stabilisation of hypoxia inducible factors HIF-1α and HIF-2α. Restoration of functional VHL via exogenous expression of pVHL reverted ccRCC cells to an oxidative metabolism and rendered them insensitive to the induction of ferroptosis. VHL reconstituted cells also exhibited reduced lipid storage and higher expression of genes associated with oxidiative phosphorylation and fatty acid metabolism. Importantly, inhibition of β-oxidation or mitochondrial ATP-synthesis restored ferroptosis sensitivity in VHL reconstituted cells. We also found that inhibition of GSH synthesis blocked tumour growth in a MYC-dependent mouse model of renal cancer. Together, our data suggest that reduced fatty acid metabolism due to inhibition of β-oxidation renders renal cancer cells highly dependent on the GSH/GPX pathway to prevent lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic cell death.
Sleep-dependent memory consolidation is observed following motor skill learning: Performance improvements are greater over a 12-h period containing sleep relative to an equivalent interval without sleep. Here we examined whether older adults exhibit sleep-dependent consolidation on a sequence learning task. Participants were trained on one of two sequence learning tasks. Performance was assessed after a 12-h break that included sleep and after a 12-h break that did not include sleep. Older and younger adults showed similar degrees of initial learning. However, performance of the older adults did not improve following sleep, providing evidence that sleep-dependent consolidation is diminished with age.A diverse set of literature indicates that sleep facilitates memory consolidation. Performance on perceptual (Karni et al. 1994) and motor skill (Walker and Stickgold 2004) tasks improves following sleep. For example, in producing learned sequences of finger movements, performance improves more after a 12-h interval with sleep than after a 12-h interval awake. Since initial performance does not differ between training in the morning or evening (Walker et al. 2002;Spencer et al. 2006), the improvement is unlikely to be due to variations in circadian cycles or arousal. Rather, these performance changes are hypothesized to reflect sleep-dependent consolidation (SDC) of learning (Walker and Stickgold 2004).It has been proposed that SDC may decrease with age, due to changes in sleep rhythms (Hornung et al. 2005), cortisol levels (Buckley and Schatzberg 2005), or other factors. However, the effect of age on SDC has not been directly examined. In the present study, we tested older adults on explicit and implicitcontextual versions of a sequence learning task. Previously, we demonstrated SDC on the performance of these tasks in young adults (Spencer et al. 2006) whereas SDC was not observed on an implicit noncontextual sequence learning task. This dissociation was in accord with the hypothesis that SDC may be restricted to tasks that engage the hippocampus. We now compare the performance of older participants to that of the younger participants, evaluating age-related effects on off-line consolidation of learning.We tested 32 right-handed individuals (17 males, 15 females) ranging in age from 45 to 80 yr (mean = 59.0; SD = 11.1). The sample of younger adults reported in Spencer et al. (2006) was composed of 38 younger adults (17 males, 21 females, mean = 20.8; SD = 2.1). Although all of the younger participants were tested prior to the older participants, the testing location, apparatus, and procedure were the same for both groups. We excluded participants who had been diagnosed with sleep disorders or were taking medications known to affect sleep. Procedures were approved by the institutional review board at UC Berkeley and informed consent was provided by all participants.Half of the participants in each age group were assigned to the "explicit" group and half to the "implicit-contextual" group. Both tasks were modified ve...
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