| Literature DB >> 35912242 |
Abdellatif El Khayari1, Najat Bouchmaa1, Bouchra Taib2,3, Zhiyun Wei4, Ailiang Zeng5, Rachid El Fatimy1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), a highly invasive and incurable tumor, is the humans' foremost, commonest, and deadliest brain cancer. As in other cancers, distinct combinations of genetic alterations (GA) in GBM induce a diversity of metabolic phenotypes resulting in enhanced malignancy and altered sensitivity to current therapies. Furthermore, GA as a hallmark of cancer, dysregulated cell metabolism in GBM has been recently linked to the acquired GA. Indeed, Numerous point mutations and copy number variations have been shown to drive glioma cells' metabolic state, affecting tumor growth and patient outcomes. Among the most common, IDH mutations, EGFR amplification, mutation, PTEN loss, and MGMT promoter mutation have emerged as key patterns associated with upregulated glycolysis and OXPHOS glutamine addiction and altered lipid metabolism in GBM. Therefore, current Advances in cancer genetic and metabolic profiling have yielded mechanistic insights into the metabolism rewiring of GBM and provided potential avenues for improved therapeutic modalities. Accordingly, actionable metabolic dependencies are currently used to design new treatments for patients with glioblastoma. Herein, we capture the current knowledge of genetic alterations in GBM, provide a detailed understanding of the alterations in metabolic pathways, and discuss their relevance in GBM therapy.Entities:
Keywords: GBM; genetic alteration; glioma therapy; glycolysis; metabolic genes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35912242 PMCID: PMC9329787 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.901951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1Commonly mutated genes and copy number variations in GBMs. Data (592 patients) from the TCGA dataset (Glioblastoma multiforme; TCGA- PanCancer Atlas) were explored using the cBioPortal platform. For clarity, only a subset of highly altered and metabolic genes are shown. EGFR, PTEN, TERT, and several metabolic genes such as IDH 1/2, HK2, MYC, LDHA, EZH2 were frequently altered in glioblastoma tumors.
Figure 2Overview of the major genetic alterations that drive metabolic reprogramming in Gliomas. Metabolic changes observed in gliomas and especially in glioblastoma are associated with several genetic abnormalities, mainly, IDH ½ mutation, EGFR amplification, mutation, or EGFRvIII activation. Also, PTEN loss, and TERT promoter mutation. Various metabolic pathways are affected, yielding a new metabolic profile that supports the high proliferative characteristic, cell adaption, and tumor progression. EZH2, Enhancer of zeste homolog 2; D2HG, d-2-hydroxyglutarate; SREPP 1, sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1; LPCAT1, lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase 1; LDLR, glutamate dehydrogenase 1; LDHA, Lactate dehydrogenase A; GDH 1, glutamate dehydrogenase 1; PGK 1, phosphoglycerate kinase 1.
Figure 3Glycolysis and its role in Glioblastoma cell proliferation and immune escape. The Warburg effect enables GBM cells to meet their energy demand through rapid ATP production, and promotes nucleotides synthesis and oxidative stress management, promoting cell proliferation. The elevated lactate production by tumor cells increases the acidification of the Tumor Microenvironment, which disturbs immune cells activation leading to impaired tumor immunosurveillance and cell migration. Immune cells (tumor-associated macrophages and Microglia) enhance glycolysis through Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF), While hypoxic conditions in the Tumor microenvironment promote glycolysis and Warburg effect by activation and stabilization of hypoxia-inducible transcription factor (HIF-1α).
Figure 4Schematic illustration of adaptive lipid metabolism in glioblastoma: role of the highly expressed ACBP, DGAT1, GPx4, and lipid droplets in lipid oxidation and ferroptosis induction. FAs, Fatty acids; FAO, Fatty acid oxidation; PUFA, Polyunsaturated fatty acids; DGAT1, diacylglycerol-acyltransferase 1; ACSL4, acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain family member 4; GPX4, glutathione peroxidase; GR, glutathione reductase; LD, lipid Droplet; LPO, lipid peroxides; ACBP, Acyl-CoA-binding protein; LDLR, low-density lipoprotein receptor; ER, Endoplasmic Reticulum.
Current Advances and main clinical trials in metabolism targeting for gliomas therapy.
| Drugs or Therapeutics | Trial Phase | Target | Mechanisms | Gliomas type | References or Clinical Trial Identifier* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Phase II | Mutant IDH1 | inhibitor of the mutant IDH 1 enzyme | Low Grade Glioma | NCT02987010 |
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| Phase I | Mutant IDH1 | mutant IDH small molecule inhibitor | Gliomas withIDH1R132 Mutations | NCT02381886 |
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| Phase I/II | Mutant IDH2 | inhibitor of the mutant IDH2 enzyme | Glioma, mutant IDH2 | NCT02273739 |
|
| Phase II | Mutant IDH1 | – | Glioma with an IDH1 mutation | NCT02073994 |
|
| Phase III | Mutant IDH1 or IDH2 | Inhibitor of Mutant IDH1 and 2 | Grade 2 Glioma | NCT04164901 |
|
| Phase I | Mutant IDH 1 | Suppression of 2-HG | LGG | NCT03343197 |
|
| Phase I/II | Mutant IDH 1 | IDH1m Inhibitor | LGG, GBM | NCT03684811 |
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| Phase I | Mutant IDH 1 | IDH-R132X-inhibitor | Anaplastic glioma, GBM | NCT02746081 |
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| Early Phase I | AMPK/Mitochondrial complex I | Metformin blocks oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria | GBM | NCT03151772 |
| Phase II | GBM | NCT02780024 | |||
| Phase I/II | IDH1/2 Gliomas | NCT02496741 | |||
| Phase I | GBM | NCT01430351 | |||
|
| Phase I b | Glutaminase (GLS) | Chemical inhibitor | Diffuse Astrocytoma, | NCT03528642 |
|
| Phase II | Fatty-acid synthase (FASN) | VB-2640 inhibits the β-ketoacyl reductase (KR) enzymatic activity of the FASN | High Grade Astrocytoma | NCT03032484 |
|
| Phase I/II | Arginine | Depletion of circulating arginine | High Grade Gliomas | NCT03455140 |
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| Phase II | Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) | Inhibition of folate metabolism and nucleotide synthesis | Glioblastoma multiforme | NCT00082797 |
|
| Phase II | Mitochondrial PDHK | DCA switches metabolism from the cytoplasmic glycolysis to the mitochondrial glucose oxidation | Glioblastoma | NCT00540176 |
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| Phase I | Redox toxicity | BPM31510 works by correcting cancer cell metabolism, | Glioblastoma multiforme | NCI-2016-01973 |
|
| Phase II | Caseinolytic protease P (ClpP) | ONC201 acts as a ClpP which regulates oxidative phosphorylation | Adults With EGFR-low Glioblastoma | NCT04629209 |
| Phase I | Targets OXPHOS and suppresses mitochondrial respiration | Pediatric H3 K27M Gliomas | NCT03416530 | ||
| Phase II | - | Recurrent H3 K27M-mutant Glioma | NCT03295396 | ||
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| Phase II | AKT/PI3K | inhibitor of Akt and PI3K, modulates phospholipid metabolism | Malignant Gliomas | NCT00590954 |
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| Phase II | HMG-CoA reductase | Inhibition of cholesterol biosynthesis | Glioblastoma | NCT02029573 |
|
| Phase I/II | Glycolytic enzyme | Glucose analog | Malignant Gliomas | ( |
Potential targets and promising agents against glioblastoma metabolism.
| Potential Targets | Therapeutic approaches | Study type | Mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Gboxin |
| inhibits the activity of F0F1 ATP synthase and thus disrupt cell metabolism | ( |
|
| AR-C117977 |
| Intracellular acidification and induction of cell death | ( |
|
| LPCAT1-shRNA |
| Suppression of EGFR signaling and alteration of membrane lipid remodeling | ( |
|
| inhibition of PHGDH with CBR-5884 |
| Alteration of Serine metabolism | ( |
|
| shRNA mediated |
| Block SREBP-1-mediated lipogenesis | ( |
|
| Inhibition by Avasimibe |
| Decrease cholesteryl ester storage in lipid droplets and increase intracellular free cholesterol balances | ( |
|
| 3-bromopyruvate (3BP) |
| 3BP induces alterations in proteins involved in aerobic glycolysis and carbohydrate metabolism. | ( |
|
| ketoconazole and posaconazole (HK2 inhibitors) |
| reduce tumor growth likely | ( |
|
| shRNA mediated HK2 silencing/ |
| miR-218 overexpression downregulates HK2, inducing thereby glycolytic metabolism alteration and cell death. | ( |
|
| Synthetic LXR agonist |
| LXR-623 kills GBM cells by reducing cellular cholesterol through activation of LXRβ. | ( |
|
| shRNA mediated |
| Reduction of ACBP expression decreases Fatty acid oxidation and hinder GBM cell proliferation. | ( |
|
| Phytol (PHY) and retinol (RET) |
| PHY and RET modulates cholesterol and fatty acid biosynthetic pathways. | ( |
|
| 27-Hydroxycholesterol (27-OHC) |
| 27-OHC inhibits cholesterol synthesis and promote its transport. | ( |
|
| HIF-1α signaling |
| miR-448 negatively regulates HIF-1 α signaling | ( |
|
| Gene Knockdown |
| Inhibitions of glycolysis and alteration of cellular metabolism | ( |
|
| 2DG, a glucose analog and glycolytic inhibitor |
| In combination with metformin Inhibits Proliferation and Cellular Energy Metabolism and induces ER stress in | ( |
|
| Dual MR |
| Targeting of OXPHOS | ( |
|
| Synthetic small molecule (KHS101) |
| Alteration of Mitochondrial bioenergetic capacity and glycolytic activity | ( |
|
| NAMPT inhibitors (GMX1778) |
| NAD+ depletion alter tumor microenvironment | ( |
|
| 15-Lipoxygenase Inhibitors |
| 15-LOX inhibition reduced migration and raised cell cycle arrest in the G2/M phase | ( |