Dietary thiamine influences l-asparaginase sensitivity in a subset of leukemia cells.

TitleDietary thiamine influences l-asparaginase sensitivity in a subset of leukemia cells.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsGuarecuco R, Williams RT, Baudrier L, La K, Passarelli MC, Ekizoglu N, Mestanoglu M, Alwaseem H, Rostandy B, Fidelin J, Garcia-Bermudez J, Molina H, Birsoy K
JournalSci Adv
Volume6
Issue41
Date Published2020 Oct
ISSN2375-2548
Abstract

Tumor environment influences anticancer therapy response but which extracellular nutrients affect drug sensitivity is largely unknown. Using functional genomics, we determine modifiers of l-asparaginase (ASNase) response and identify thiamine pyrophosphate kinase 1 as a metabolic dependency under ASNase treatment. While thiamine is generally not limiting for cell proliferation, a DNA-barcode competition assay identifies leukemia cell lines that grow suboptimally under low thiamine and are characterized by low expression of solute carrier family 19 member 2 (SLC19A2), a thiamine transporter. SLC19A2 is necessary for optimal growth and ASNase resistance, when standard medium thiamine is lowered ~100-fold to human plasma concentrations. In addition, humanizing blood thiamine content of mice through diet sensitizes SLC19A2-low leukemia cells to ASNase in vivo. Together, our work reveals that thiamine utilization is a determinant of ASNase response for some cancer cells and that oversupplying vitamins may affect therapeutic response in leukemia.

DOI10.1126/sciadv.abc7120
Alternate JournalSci Adv
PubMed ID33036978
PubMed Central IDPMC7546708
Grant ListDP2 CA228042 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM007739 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
F30 CA247026 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
F30 CA247199 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
F31 CA247528 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States

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