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Bone Marrow Adipocyte-Derived Free Fatty Acids Induce Gene Signature Linking Transcription with Metabolic Changes That Contribute to Survival of Acute Monocytic Leukemia Cells

Authors :
Takashi Miida
Yuka Miyamae
Saiko Kazuno
Michael Andreeff
Takehiko Yokomizo
Marina Konopleva
Hiromichi Matsushita
Takashi Ueno
Kaoru Mogushi
Yoko Tabe
Masako Harada
Tsutomu Fujimura
Ismael Samudio
Source :
Blood. 124:1013-1013
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2014.

Abstract

Adipocytes are the prevalent stromal cell type in adult bone marrows (BM). With increasing age, BM stroma-resident mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), increase their capacity to differentiate into adipocytes, which leads to the progressive accumulation of fat in the BM space. It is conceivable that the increased BM adipocyte content promotes leukemogenesis and negatively affects responsiveness to chemotherapy. We previously reported that free fatty acids (FFAs) promote the metabolic shift from pyruvate oxidation to fatty acid oxidation (FAO), which causes uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and promotes leukemia cell survival (Samudio, J Clin Invest. 2010). We further demonstrated the prominent antiapoptotic effects of BM-derived adipocytes co-cultured with cells from acute monocytic leukemia (AMoL), a poor-prognosis subtype of AML (Tabe ASH. 2013). Proteomic analysis with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ) showed upregulation of protein folding pathways which increases the expression of antiapoptotic chaperone proteins HSP70 and HSP90, of integrin-mediated cell adhesion and migration pathways and downregulation of oxidative phosphorylation along with repression of cytochrome c.Metacore gene ontology (GO) analysis identified NF-kB, c-Jun, SP1, AP-1, and HMG as the potent relevant transcription factors that closely interact with and activate chaperone proteins, chromatin, and gene transcription. In this study, we characterized a gene signature linking transcription with metabolic changes that contribute to AMoL cell survival under conditions mimicking aging BM with prevalent adipocytes. We confirmed the antiapoptotic role of FFAs produced by the primary BM MSC-derived adipocytes via pharmacologic inhibition of FAO by etomoxir (EX), which inhibits fatty acid entry into the mitochondria. EX (50mM) treatment reversed the prosurvival effects of adipocytes on serum-starved U937 monoblast cells (% Annexin V, -/+ EX: mono-culture, 30.1±9.0 / 31.5±4.6; co-culture with adipocytes, 8.9±2.1 / 29.6±9.2; P=0.02). To assess the molecular links between metabolic pathways and gene expression triggered by BM adipocytes, we performed RNA-seq transcriptome analysis with a next generation sequencer system HiSeq1500 (Illumina) using TopHat software for alignment and Cufflinks software for identifying differential gene expression. RNA-Seq detected upregulation of 21 genes in U937 cells after co-culture with BM-derived adipocytes (false discovery rate, DNA array (GeneSQUARE) analysis and quantitative RT-PCR detected upregulation of fatty acid binding protein 4 (FABP4), scavenger receptor CD36, nuclear receptor PPARG, and antiapoptotic Bcl-2 in U937 cells co-cultured with adipocytes. It is known that FFAs, the ligand of nuclear receptor PPARγ, activate PPARγ and promote FFA uptake through transcriptional induction of CD36 and FABP4 in monocytic cells. EX treatment, which blocks the entry of fatty acids into the mitochondria, induced prominent elevation of FABP4 in U937 cells co-cultured with adipocytes. These results indicate that the FABP4-mediated internalization and ligation of fatty acids to PPARγ facilitates transcriptional activation. From the transcriptome analysis and the mitochondrial uncoupling metabolic changes, we conclude that the survival of AMoL cells depends on the cooperative interactions between lipid metabolism and transcriptional activation of factors associated with chaperones, chemokines, and integrins. Strategies targeting FAO warrant further exploration in patients with monocytic leukemia, which is highly dependent on altered lipid metabolism. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b23681b7a00bba977c6c3a7505ed4ea0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v124.21.1013.1013