| Literature DB >> 35771494 |
Mirunalini Ravichandran1,2, Jingjie Hu1,2, Charles Cai3, Nathan P Ward4, Anthony Venida1,2, Callum Foakes1,2, Miljan Kuljanin5, Annan Yang6, Connor J Hennessey6, Yang Yang1,2, Brandon R Desousa7,8, Gilles Rademaker1,2, Annelot A L Staes1,2, Zeynep Cakir1,2, Isha H Jain7,8, Andrew J Aguirre6,9, Joseph D Mancias5, Yin Shen3, Gina M DeNicola4, Rushika M Perera1,2,10.
Abstract
The mechanisms underlying metabolic adaptation of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) cells to pharmacologic inhibition of RAS-MAPK signaling are largely unknown. Using transcriptome and chromatin immunoprecipitation profiling of PDA cells treated with the MEK inhibitor (MEKi) trametinib, we identify transcriptional antagonism between c-MYC and the master transcription factors for lysosome gene expression, the MiT/TFE proteins. Under baseline conditions, c-MYC and MiT/TFE factors compete for binding to lysosome gene promoters to fine-tune gene expression. Treatment of PDA cells or patient organoids with MEKi leads to c-MYC downregulation and increased MiT/TFE-dependent lysosome biogenesis. Quantitative proteomics of immunopurified lysosomes uncovered reliance on ferritinophagy, the selective degradation of the iron storage complex ferritin, in MEKi-treated cells. Ferritinophagy promotes mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster protein synthesis and enhanced mitochondrial respiration. Accordingly, suppressing iron utilization sensitizes PDA cells to MEKi, highlighting a critical and targetable reliance on lysosome-dependent iron supply during adaptation to KRAS-MAPK inhibition. SIGNIFICANCE: Reduced c-MYC levels following MAPK pathway suppression facilitate the upregulation of autophagy and lysosome biogenesis. Increased autophagy-lysosome activity is required for increased ferritinophagy-mediated iron supply, which supports mitochondrial respiration under therapy stress. Disruption of ferritinophagy synergizes with KRAS-MAPK inhibition and blocks PDA growth, thus highlighting a key targetable metabolic dependency. See related commentary by Jain and Amaravadi, p. 2023. See related article by Santana-Codina et al., p. 2180. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2007. ©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35771494 PMCID: PMC9444964 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-22-0044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 38.272