Back to Search Start Over

MondoA drives malignancy in B-ALL through enhanced adaptation to metabolic stress

Authors :
Sipol, Alexandra
Hameister, Erik
Xue, Busheng
Hofstetter, Julia
Barenboim, Maxim
Öllinger, Rupert
Jain, Gaurav
Prexler, Carolin
Rubio, Rebeca Alba
Baldauf, Michaela C.
Franchina, Davide G.
Petry, Andreas
Schmäh, Juliane
Thiel, Uwe
Görlach, Agnes
Cario, Gunnar
Brenner, Dirk
Richter, Günther H.S.
Grünewald, Thomas G.P.
Rad, Roland
Wolf, Elmar
Ruland, Jürgen
Sorensen, Poul H.
Burdach, Stefan E.G.
Source :
Blood; February 2022, Vol. 139 Issue: 8 p1184-1197, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cancer cells are in most instances characterized by rapid proliferation and uncontrolled cell division. Hence, they must adapt to proliferation-induced metabolic stress through intrinsic or acquired antimetabolic stress responses to maintain homeostasis and survival. One mechanism to achieve this is reprogramming gene expression in a metabolism-dependent manner. MondoA (also known as Myc-associated factor X–like protein X-interacting protein [MLXIP]), a member of the MYC interactome, has been described as an example of such a metabolic sensor. However, the role of MondoA in malignancy is not fully understood and the underlying mechanism in metabolic responses remains elusive. By assessing patient data sets, we found that MondoA overexpression is associated with worse survival in pediatric common acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL; B-precursor ALL [B-ALL]). Using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) and RNA-interference approaches, we observed that MondoA depletion reduces the transformational capacity of B-ALL cells in vitro and dramatically inhibits malignant potential in an in vivo mouse model. Interestingly, reduced expression of MondoA in patient data sets correlated with enrichment in metabolic pathways. The loss of MondoA correlated with increased tricarboxylic acid cycle activity. Mechanistically, MondoA senses metabolic stress in B-ALL cells by restricting oxidative phosphorylation through reduced pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. Glutamine starvation conditions greatly enhance this effect and highlight the inability to mitigate metabolic stress upon loss of MondoA in B-ALL. Our findings give novel insight into the function of MondoA in pediatric B-ALL and support the notion that MondoA inhibition in this entity offers a therapeutic opportunity and should be further explored.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971 and 15280020
Volume :
139
Issue :
8
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56064608
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2020007932