| Literature DB >> 35853457 |
Ian D Ferguson1, Yu-Hsiu T Lin1, Christine Lam1, Hao Shao2, Kevin M Tharp3, Martina Hale1, Corynn Kasap4, Margarette C Mariano1, Audrey Kishishita5, Bonell Patiño Escobar1, Kamal Mandal1, Veronica Steri6, Donghui Wang6, Paul Phojanakong6, Sami T Tuomivaara1, Byron Hann6, Christoph Driessen7, Brian Van Ness8, Jason E Gestwicki2, Arun P Wiita9.
Abstract
Proteasome inhibitor (PI) resistance remains a central challenge in multiple myeloma. To identify pathways mediating resistance, we first mapped proteasome-associated genetic co-dependencies. We identified heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) chaperones as potential targets, consistent with proposed mechanisms of myeloma cells overcoming PI-induced stress. We therefore explored allosteric HSP70 inhibitors (JG compounds) as myeloma therapeutics. JG compounds exhibited increased efficacy against acquired and intrinsic PI-resistant myeloma models, unlike HSP90 inhibition. Shotgun and pulsed SILAC mass spectrometry demonstrated that JGs unexpectedly impact myeloma proteostasis by destabilizing the 55S mitoribosome. Our data suggest JGs have the most pronounced anti-myeloma effect not through inhibiting cytosolic HSP70 proteins but instead through mitochondrial-localized HSP70, HSPA9/mortalin. Analysis of myeloma patient data further supports strong effects of global proteostasis capacity, and particularly HSPA9 expression, on PI response. Our results characterize myeloma proteostasis networks under therapeutic pressure while motivating further investigation of HSPA9 as a specific vulnerability in PI-resistant disease.Entities:
Keywords: HSP70; bortezomib; mitochondria; mitoribosome; myeloma; proteasome inhibitor; proteomics; proteostasis; resistance
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35853457 PMCID: PMC9434701 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2022.06.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Chem Biol ISSN: 2451-9448 Impact factor: 9.039