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Targeted inhibition of tumor-specific glutaminase diminishes cell-autonomous tumorigenesis

Authors :
Anne Le
Arvin M. Gouw
Brian J. Altman
Libing Song
Dean W. Felsher
Zachary E. Stine
Roddy S. O’Connor
Yan Xiang
Yunqi Lu
Anthony A. Mancuso
Chi V. Dang
Caroline G.L. Lee
Linchong Sun
Stephen Rayport
Jingli Zhuo
Andrew S. McCallion
Benedict Yan
Michael C. Milone
Ping Gao
Ajit G. Thomas
London L.P.J. Ooi
Jinsong Xia
Annie L. Hsieh
Barbara S. Slusher
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2015.

Abstract

Glutaminase (GLS), which converts glutamine to glutamate, plays a key role in cancer cell metabolism, growth, and proliferation. GLS is being explored as a cancer therapeutic target, but whether GLS inhibitors affect cancer cell–autonomous growth or the host microenvironment or have off-target effects is unknown. Here, we report that loss of one copy of Gls blunted tumor progression in an immune-competent MYC-mediated mouse model of hepatocellular carcinoma. Compared with results in untreated animals with MYC-induced hepatocellular carcinoma, administration of the GLS-specific inhibitor bis-2-(5-phenylacetamido-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl)ethyl sulfide (BPTES) prolonged survival without any apparent toxicities. BPTES also inhibited growth of a MYC-dependent human B cell lymphoma cell line (P493) by blocking DNA replication, leading to cell death and fragmentation. In mice harboring P493 tumor xenografts, BPTES treatment inhibited tumor cell growth; however, P493 xenografts expressing a BPTES-resistant GLS mutant (GLS-K325A) or overexpressing GLS were not affected by BPTES treatment. Moreover, a customized Vivo-Morpholino that targets human GLS mRNA markedly inhibited P493 xenograft growth without affecting mouse Gls expression. Conversely, a Vivo-Morpholino directed at mouse Gls had no antitumor activity in vivo. Collectively, our studies demonstrate that GLS is required for tumorigenesis and support small molecule and genetic inhibition of GLS as potential approaches for targeting the tumor cell–autonomous dependence on GLS for cancer therapy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2534502e75e9974a516d8a4f51ca25c8