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Functional Genomics Reveals Synthetic Lethality between Phosphogluconate Dehydrogenase and Oxidative Phosphorylation

Authors :
Alessandro Carugo
Robert A. Mullinax
Mary Geck Do
Meredith A. Miller
Virginia Giuliani
Qing Chang
Giulio Draetta
John M. Asara
Sahil Seth
Melinda Smith
Norma Rogers
Joseph R. Marszalek
Jing Han
Philip Jones
Paul G. Leonard
Trang N. Tieu
Yongying Jiang
Brooke A. Meyers
Ronald A. DePinho
Timothy P. Heffernan
Michael Peoples
Marc O. Warmoes
Barbara Czako
Ningping Feng
Carlo Toniatti
Lili Miao
Xi Shi
Yuting Sun
Xiaoyan Ma
Florian L. Muller
Christopher A. Bristow
Wylie S. Palmer
Madhavi Bandi
Shuping Zhao
Faika Mseeh
Pietro Morlacchi
Philip L. Lorenzi
Timothy Lofton
Source :
Cell Reports, Vol 26, Iss 2, Pp 469-482.e5 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Summary: The plasticity of a preexisting regulatory circuit compromises the effectiveness of targeted therapies, and leveraging genetic vulnerabilities in cancer cells may overcome such adaptations. Hereditary leiomyomatosis renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) is characterized by oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) deficiency caused by fumarate hydratase (FH) nullizyogosity. To identify metabolic genes that are synthetically lethal with OXPHOS deficiency, we conducted a genetic loss-of-function screen and found that phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGD) inhibition robustly blocks the proliferation of FH mutant cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, PGD inhibition blocks glycolysis, suppresses reductive carboxylation of glutamine, and increases the NADP+/NADPH ratio to disrupt redox homeostasis. Furthermore, in the OXPHOS-proficient context, blocking OXPHOS using the small-molecule inhibitor IACS-010759 enhances sensitivity to PGD inhibition in vitro and in vivo. Together, our study reveals a dependency on PGD in OXPHOS-deficient tumors that might inform therapeutic intervention in specific patient populations. : Loss-of-function genetics screen reveals a synthetically lethal interaction between OXPHOS inhibition and phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGD) inactivation. Sun et al. provide an example of targeting tumor metabolism in a genetically predefined context to maximize therapeutic impact and propose PGD as a therapeutic target for fumarate hydratase-deficient HLRCC. Keywords: synthetic lethality, PGD, OXPHOS, tumor metabolism, metabolic vulnerability, fumarate hydratase, redox homeostasis, functional genomics, hereditary leiomyomatosis renal cell carcinoma, pentose phosphate pathway

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22111247
Volume :
26
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....35e500f8c834bef5282453e6ef86d304