| Literature DB >> 30244971 |
Laura Hulea1, Simon-Pierre Gravel2, Masahiro Morita3, Marie Cargnello4, Oro Uchenunu5, Young Kyuen Im5, Camille Lehuédé6, Eric H Ma7, Matthew Leibovitch1, Shannon McLaughlan1, Marie-José Blouin8, Maxime Parisotto9, Vasilios Papavasiliou10, Cynthia Lavoie10, Ola Larsson11, Michael Ohh12, Tiago Ferreira13, Celia Greenwood14, Gaëlle Bridon10, Daina Avizonis10, Gerardo Ferbeyre15, Peter Siegel16, Russell G Jones7, William Muller17, Josie Ursini-Siegel18, Julie St-Pierre19, Michael Pollak20, Ivan Topisirovic21.
Abstract
There is increasing interest in therapeutically exploiting metabolic differences between normal and cancer cells. We show that kinase inhibitors (KIs) and biguanides synergistically and selectively target a variety of cancer cells. Synthesis of non-essential amino acids (NEAAs) aspartate, asparagine, and serine, as well as glutamine metabolism, are major determinants of the efficacy of KI/biguanide combinations. The mTORC1/4E-BP axis regulates aspartate, asparagine, and serine synthesis by modulating mRNA translation, while ablation of 4E-BP1/2 substantially decreases sensitivity of breast cancer and melanoma cells to KI/biguanide combinations. Efficacy of the KI/biguanide combinations is also determined by HIF-1α-dependent perturbations in glutamine metabolism, which were observed in VHL-deficient renal cancer cells. This suggests that cancer cells display metabolic plasticity by engaging non-redundant adaptive mechanisms, which allows them to survive therapeutic insults that target cancer metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: HIF-1α; biguanide; cancer; kinase inhibitor; mRNA translation; mTORC1; metabolic plasticity; metabolism; non-essential amino acids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30244971 PMCID: PMC7252493 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2018.09.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287