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Uridine-derived ribose fuels glucose-restricted pancreatic cancer

Authors :
Zeribe C. Nwosu
Matthew H. Ward
Peter Sajjakulnukit
Pawan Poudel
Chanthirika Ragulan
Steven Kasperek
Megan Radyk
Damien Sutton
Rosa E. Menjivar
Anthony Andren
Juan J. Apiz-Saab
Zachary Tolstyka
Kristee Brown
Ho-Joon Lee
Lindsey N. Dzierozynski
Xi He
Hari PS
Julia Ugras
Gift Nyamundanda
Li Zhang
Christopher J. Halbrook
Eileen S. Carpenter
Jiaqi Shi
Leah P. Shriver
Gary J. Patti
Alexander Muir
Marina Pasca di Magliano
Anguraj Sadanandam
Costas A. Lyssiotis
Source :
Nature, vol 618, iss 7963
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is a lethal disease notoriously resistant to therapy1,2. This is mediated in part by a complex tumour microenvironment3, low vascularity4, and metabolic aberrations5,6. Although altered metabolism drives tumour progression, the spectrum of metabolites used as nutrients by PDA remains largely unknown. Here we identified uridine as a fuel for PDA in glucose-deprived conditions by assessing how more than 175 metabolites impacted metabolic activity in 21 pancreatic cell lines under nutrient restriction. Uridine utilization strongly correlated with the expression of uridine phosphorylase 1 (UPP1), which we demonstrate liberates uridine-derived ribose to fuel central carbon metabolism and thereby support redox balance, survival and proliferation in glucose-restricted PDA cells. In PDA, UPP1 is regulated by KRASā€“MAPK signalling and is augmented by nutrient restriction. Consistently, tumours expressed high UPP1 compared with non-tumoural tissues, and UPP1 expression correlated with poor survival in cohorts of patients with PDA. Uridine is available in the tumour microenvironment, and we demonstrated that uridine-derived ribose is actively catabolized in tumours. Finally, UPP1 deletion restricted the ability of PDA cells to use uridine and blunted tumour growth in immunocompetent mouse models. Our data identify uridine utilization as an important compensatory metabolic process in nutrient-deprived PDA cells, suggesting a novel metabolic axis for PDA therapy.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
618
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d191d0edf29f3dd2aee52f13ee2ef22
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06073-w