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Coordinated Transcriptional and Catabolic Programs Support Iron-Dependent Adaptation to RAS-MAPK Pathway Inhibition in Pancreatic Cancer.

Authors :
Ravichandran M
Hu J
Cai C
Ward NP
Venida A
Foakes C
Kuljanin M
Yang A
Hennessey CJ
Yang Y
Desousa BR
Rademaker G
Staes AAL
Cakir Z
Jain IH
Aguirre AJ
Mancias JD
Shen Y
DeNicola GM
Perera RM
Source :
Cancer discovery [Cancer Discov] 2022 Sep 02; Vol. 12 (9), pp. 2198-2219.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The mechanisms underlying metabolic adaptation of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) cells to pharmacologic inhibition of RAS-MAPK signaling are largely unknown. Using transcriptome and chromatin immunoprecipitation profiling of PDA cells treated with the MEK inhibitor (MEKi) trametinib, we identify transcriptional antagonism between c-MYC and the master transcription factors for lysosome gene expression, the MiT/TFE proteins. Under baseline conditions, c-MYC and MiT/TFE factors compete for binding to lysosome gene promoters to fine-tune gene expression. Treatment of PDA cells or patient organoids with MEKi leads to c-MYC downregulation and increased MiT/TFE-dependent lysosome biogenesis. Quantitative proteomics of immunopurified lysosomes uncovered reliance on ferritinophagy, the selective degradation of the iron storage complex ferritin, in MEKi-treated cells. Ferritinophagy promotes mitochondrial iron-sulfur cluster protein synthesis and enhanced mitochondrial respiration. Accordingly, suppressing iron utilization sensitizes PDA cells to MEKi, highlighting a critical and targetable reliance on lysosome-dependent iron supply during adaptation to KRAS-MAPK inhibition.<br />Significance: Reduced c-MYC levels following MAPK pathway suppression facilitate the upregulation of autophagy and lysosome biogenesis. Increased autophagy-lysosome activity is required for increased ferritinophagy-mediated iron supply, which supports mitochondrial respiration under therapy stress. Disruption of ferritinophagy synergizes with KRAS-MAPK inhibition and blocks PDA growth, thus highlighting a key targetable metabolic dependency. See related commentary by Jain and Amaravadi, p. 2023. See related article by Santana-Codina et al., p. 2180. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 2007.<br /> (©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2159-8290
Volume :
12
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer discovery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35771494
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.CD-22-0044