The Essential Role of the Non-Essential Amino Acid Asparagine in Lymphoid Malignancies

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2023-05
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American English
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Ph.D.
Degree Year
2023
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Indiana University
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Abstract

Cancer cells display increased metabolic demands to support their proliferation and biosynthetic needs. It has been extensively shown in cancers, that amino acids have functions beyond the role of mRNA translation. The breadth of functions makes amino acid restriction an effective strategy for cancer therapy; hence an important line of research involves targeting amino acid acquisition and metabolism therapeutically. Currently, asparagine depletion via L-Asparaginase in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) remains the only clinically approved therapy to date. In the first project, we showed that ALL cells are auxotrophic for asparagine and rely on exogenous sources for this non-essential amino acid. However, sensitivity to L-Asparaginase therapy is mitigated by the expression of the enzyme asparagine synthetase (ASNS), involved in de novo asparagine biosynthesis. We showed that this adaptive response requires two essential steps; demethylation of the ASNS promoter and recruitment of activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) to the promoter to drive ASNS transcription. Our follow-up study in ALL cells showed that asparagine bioavailability (through de novo biosynthesis or exogenous sources) is essential to maintain the expression of the critical oncogene c-MYC. c-MYC is a potent transcription factor and is dysregulated in over 60% of cancers, including hematopoietic malignancies. We showed that this regulation by asparagine is primarily at the translation level and c-MYC expression is rescued only when exogenous asparagine is available or when cells can undertake de novo biosynthesis. At the biochemical level, asparagine depletion also causes an induction of ATF4 mediated stress response and suppression of global translation mediated by decreased mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) activity. However, we found that neither inhibition of the stress response or rescuing global translation rescued c-MYC protein expression. We also extended this observation to c-MYC-driven lymphomas using cell lines and orthotopic in vivo models. We showed that genetic inhibition of ASNS or pharmacological inhibition of asparagine production can significantly limit c-MYC protein and tumor growth when environmental asparagine is limiting. Overall, our work shows an essential role for asparagine in lymphoid cancers and has expanded on the usage of L-Asparaginase to resistant leukemias and lymphomas.

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Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)
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