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      Serine restriction alters sphingolipid diversity to constrain tumour growth

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          Abstract

          Summary Serine, glycine, and other non-essential amino acids are critical for tumor progression, and strategies to limit their availability are emerging as potential cancer therapies 1–3 . However, the molecular mechanisms driving this response remain unclear, and the impact on lipid metabolism is relatively unexplored. Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) catalyzes the de novo biosynthesis of sphingolipids but also produces non-canonical 1-deoxysphingolipids (doxSLs) when using alanine as a substrate 4,5 . DoxSLs accumulate in the context of SPTLC1 or SPTLC2 mutations 6,7 or low serine availability 8,9 to drive neuropathy, and deoxysphinganine (doxSA) has been investigated as an anti-cancer agent 10 . Here we exploit amino acid metabolism and SPT promiscuity to modulate the endogenous synthesis of toxic doxSLs and slow tumor progression. Anchorage-independent growth reprograms a metabolic network involving serine, alanine, and pyruvate resulting in increased susceptibility to endogenous doxSL synthesis. Targeting the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) promotes alanine oxidation to mitigate doxSL synthesis and improves spheroid growth, while direct inhibition of doxSL synthesis drives similar phenotypes. Restriction of dietary serine/glycine potently induces accumulation of doxSLs in xenografts while decreasing tumor growth. Pharmacological modulation of SPT rescues xenograft growth on serine/glycine-restricted diets, while reduction of circulating serine by inhibition of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) leads to doxSL accumulation and mitigates tumor growth. SPT promiscuity therefore links serine and mitochondrial alanine metabolism to membrane lipid diversity, which sensitizes tumors to metabolic stress.

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          Most cited references37

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          Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase diverts glycolytic flux and contributes to oncogenesis.

          Most tumors exhibit increased glucose metabolism to lactate, however, the extent to which glucose-derived metabolic fluxes are used for alternative processes is poorly understood. Using a metabolomics approach with isotope labeling, we found that in some cancer cells a relatively large amount of glycolytic carbon is diverted into serine and glycine metabolism through phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH). An analysis of human cancers showed that PHGDH is recurrently amplified in a genomic region of focal copy number gain most commonly found in melanoma. Decreasing PHGDH expression impaired proliferation in amplified cell lines. Increased expression was also associated with breast cancer subtypes, and ectopic expression of PHGDH in mammary epithelial cells disrupted acinar morphogenesis and induced other phenotypic alterations that may predispose cells to transformation. Our findings show that the diversion of glycolytic flux into a specific alternate pathway can be selected during tumor development and may contribute to the pathogenesis of human cancer.
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            Functional genomics reveals serine synthesis is essential in PHGDH-amplified breast cancer

            Cancer cells adapt their metabolic processes to drive macromolecular biosynthesis for rapid cell growth and proliferation (1,2). RNAi-based loss of function screening has proven powerful for the identification of novel and interesting cancer targets, and recent studies have used this technology in vivo to identify novel tumor suppressor genes (3). Here, we developed a method for identifying novel cancer targets via negative selection RNAi screening in solid tumours. Using this method, we screened a set of metabolic genes associated with aggressive breast cancer and stemness to identify those required for in vivo tumourigenesis. Among the genes identified, phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) is in a genomic region of recurrent copy number gain in breast cancer and PHGDH protein levels are elevated in 70% of ER-negative breast cancers. PHGDH catalyzes the first step in the serine biosynthesis pathway, and breast cancer cells with high PHGDH expression have elevations in serine synthesis flux. Suppression of PHGDH in cell lines with elevated PHGDH expression, but not those without, causes a strong decrease in cell proliferation and a reduction in serine synthesis. We find that PHGDH suppression does not affect intracellular serine levels, but causes a drop in the levels of alpha-ketoglutarate, another output of the pathway and a TCA cycle intermediate. In cells with high PHGDH expression, the serine synthesis pathway contributes approximately 50% of the total anaplerotic flux of glutamine into the TCA cycle. These results reveal that certain breast cancers are dependent upon increased serine pathway flux caused by PHGDH over-expression and demonstrate the utility of in vivo negative selection RNAi screens for finding potential anticancer targets.
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              Asparagine bioavailability governs metastasis in a model of breast cancer

              Using a functional model of breast cancer heterogeneity, we previously showed that clonal sub-populations proficient at generating circulating tumour cells were not all equally capable of forming metastases at secondary sites. A combination of differential expression and focused in vitro and in vivo RNA interference screens revealed candidate drivers of metastasis that discriminated metastatic clones. Among these, asparagine synthetase expression in a patient's primary tumour was most strongly correlated with later metastatic relapse. Here we show that asparagine bioavailability strongly influences metastatic potential. Limiting asparagine by knockdown of asparagine synthetase, treatment with l-asparaginase, or dietary asparagine restriction reduces metastasis without affecting growth of the primary tumour, whereas increased dietary asparagine or enforced asparagine synthetase expression promotes metastatic progression. Altering asparagine availability in vitro strongly influences invasive potential, which is correlated with an effect on proteins that promote the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. This provides at least one potential mechanism for how the bioavailability of a single amino acid could regulate metastatic progression.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Nature
                Nature
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                August 12 2020
                Article
                10.1038/s41586-020-2609-x
                29441d6c-94fa-42a8-a36f-d806163380c3
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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