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A distinct glucose metabolism signature of acute myeloid leukemia with prognostic value.

Authors :
Wen-Lian Chen
Jing-Han Wang
Ai-Hua Zhao
Xin Xu
Yi-Huang Wang
Tian-Lu Chen
Jun-Min Li
Jian-Qing Mi
Yong-Mei Zhu
Yuan-Fang Liu
Yue-Ying Wang
Jie Jin
He Huang
De-Pei Wu
Yan Li
Xiao-Jing Yan
Jin-Song Yan
Jian-Yong Li
Shuai Wang
Xiao-Jun Huang
Source :
Blood. 9/4/2014, Vol. 124 Issue 10, p1645-1654. 10p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a group of hematological malignancies with high heterogeneity. There is an increasing need to improve the risk stratification of AML patients, including those with normal cytogenetics, using molecular biomarkers. Here, we report a metabolomics study that identified a distinct glucose metabolism signature with 400 AML patients and 446 healthy controls. The glucose metabolism signature comprises a panel of 6 serum metabolite markers, which demonstrated prognostic value in cytogenetically normal AML patients. We generated a prognosis risk score (PRS) with 6 metabolite markers for each patient using principal component analysis. A low PRS was able to predict patients with poor survival independently of well-established markers. We further compared the gene expression patterns of AML blast cells between low and high PRS groups, which correlated well to the metabolic pathways involving the 6 metabolite markers, with enhanced glycolysis and trichloracetic acid cycle at gene expression level in low PRS group. In vitro results demonstrated enhanced glycolysis contributed to decreased sensitivity to antileukemic agent arabinofuranosyl cytidine (Ara-C), whereas inhibition of glycolysis suppressed AML cell proliferation and potentiated cytotoxicity of Ara-C. Our study provides strong evidence for the use of serum metabolites and metabolic pathways as novel prognostic markers and potential therapeutic targets for AML. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971
Volume :
124
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
98172868
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2014-02-554204