克拉斯
STK11段
癌症研究
生物
嘧啶代谢
癌症
激酶
突变体
生物化学
酶
遗传学
基因
结直肠癌
嘌呤
作者
Jiyeon Kim,Hyun Min Lee,Feng Cai,Bookyung Ko,Chendong Yang,Elizabeth L. Lieu,Nefertiti Muhammad,Shawn Rhyne,Kailong Li,Mohamed Haloul,Wen Gu,Brandon Faubert,Akash K. Kaushik,Ling Cai,Sahba Kasiri,Ummay Marriam,Kien Nham,Luc Girard,Hui Wang,Xiankai Sun
出处
期刊:Nature metabolism
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2020-11-30
卷期号:2 (12): 1401-1412
被引量:106
标识
DOI:10.1038/s42255-020-00316-0
摘要
In non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), concurrent mutations in the oncogene KRAS and the tumour suppressor STK11 (also known as LKB1) encoding the kinase LKB1 result in aggressive tumours prone to metastasis but with liabilities arising from reprogrammed metabolism. We previously demonstrated perturbed nitrogen metabolism and addiction to an unconventional pathway of pyrimidine synthesis in KRAS/LKB1 co-mutant cancer cells. To gain broader insight into metabolic reprogramming in NSCLC, we analysed tumour metabolomes in a series of genetically engineered mouse models with oncogenic KRAS combined with mutations in LKB1 or p53. Metabolomics and gene expression profiling pointed towards activation of the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway (HBP), another nitrogen-related metabolic pathway, in both mouse and human KRAS/LKB1 co-mutant tumours. KRAS/LKB1 co-mutant cells contain high levels of HBP metabolites, higher flux through the HBP pathway and elevated dependence on the HBP enzyme glutamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase [isomerizing] 2 (GFPT2). GFPT2 inhibition selectively reduced KRAS/LKB1 co-mutant tumour cell growth in culture, xenografts and genetically modified mice. Our results define a new metabolic vulnerability in KRAS/LKB1 co-mutant tumours and provide a rationale for targeting GFPT2 in this aggressive NSCLC subtype. A particularly aggressive subtype of lung cancer with mutations in KRAS and LKB1 is shown to depend on increased hexosamine biosynthesis mediated by the enzyme GFPT2.
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