Metabolite Profiling Reveals the Glutathione Biosynthetic Pathway as a Therapeutic Target in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

TitleMetabolite Profiling Reveals the Glutathione Biosynthetic Pathway as a Therapeutic Target in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsBeatty A, Fink LS, Singh T, Strigun A, Peter E, Ferrer CM, Nicolas E, Cai KQ, Moran TP, Reginato MJ, Rennefahrt U, Peterson JR
JournalMol Cancer Ther
Volume17
Issue1
Pagination264-275
Date Published2018 Jan
ISSN1538-8514
Abstract

Cancer cells can exhibit altered dependency on specific metabolic pathways and targeting these dependencies is a promising therapeutic strategy. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive and genomically heterogeneous subset of breast cancer that is resistant to existing targeted therapies. To identify metabolic pathway dependencies in TNBC, we first conducted mass spectrometry-based metabolomics of TNBC and control cells. Relative levels of intracellular metabolites distinguished TNBC from nontransformed breast epithelia and revealed two metabolic subtypes within TNBC that correlate with markers of basal-like versus non-basal-like status. Among the distinguishing metabolites, levels of the cellular redox buffer glutathione were lower in TNBC cell lines compared to controls and markedly lower in non-basal-like TNBC. Significantly, these cell lines showed enhanced sensitivity to pharmacologic inhibition of glutathione biosynthesis that was rescued by N-acetylcysteine, demonstrating a dependence on glutathione production to suppress ROS and support tumor cell survival. Consistent with this, patients whose tumors express elevated levels of γ-glutamylcysteine ligase, the rate-limiting enzyme in glutathione biosynthesis, had significantly poorer survival. We find, further, that agents that limit the availability of glutathione precursors enhance both glutathione depletion and TNBC cell killing by γ-glutamylcysteine ligase inhibitors Importantly, we demonstrate the ability to this approach to suppress glutathione levels and TNBC xenograft growth Overall, these findings support the potential of targeting the glutathione biosynthetic pathway as a therapeutic strategy in TNBC and identify the non-basal-like subset as most likely to respond. .

DOI10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-0407
Alternate JournalMol. Cancer Ther.
PubMed ID29021292
PubMed Central IDPMC5892195
Grant ListP30 CA006927 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 GM083025 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States

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