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AML cells have low spare reserve capacity in their respiratory chain that renders them susceptible to oxidative metabolic stress

Authors :
Mahadeo A. Sukhai
Peter J. Mullen
Neil MacLean
Bozhena Jhas
Linda Z. Penn
John E. Dick
Stephanie Z. Xie
Marko Skrtic
Carolyn A. Goard
Mark D. Minden
Wei Xu
Feng-Hsu Lin
Danny V. Jeyaraju
Timothy E. Chung
Swayam Prabha
Aaron D. Schimmer
Marcela Gronda
Yulia Jitkova
Rose Hurren
Ian M. Rogers
Shrivani Sriskanthadevan
Xiaoming Wang
Rob C. Laister
Source :
Blood. 125(13)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Mitochondrial respiration is a crucial component of cellular metabolism that can become dysregulated in cancer. Compared with normal hematopoietic cells, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells and patient samples have higher mitochondrial mass, without a concomitant increase in respiratory chain complex activity. Hence these cells have a lower spare reserve capacity in the respiratory chain and are more susceptible to oxidative stress. We therefore tested the effects of increasing the electron flux through the respiratory chain as a strategy to induce oxidative stress and cell death preferentially in AML cells. Treatment with the fatty acid palmitate induced oxidative stress and cell death in AML cells, and it suppressed tumor burden in leukemic cell lines and primary patient sample xenografts in the absence of overt toxicity to normal cells and organs. These data highlight a unique metabolic vulnerability in AML, and identify a new therapeutic strategy that targets abnormal oxidative metabolism in this malignancy.

Details

ISSN :
15280020
Volume :
125
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee918c50a81b0e83f998a978a4aa41b5