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Purine synthesis promotes maintenance of brain tumor initiating cells in glioma

Authors :
Christopher G. Hubert
Wenchao Zhou
Xiaojing Liu
Tae Hyun Hwang
Kailin Yang
Yu Shi
Jason W. Locasale
Meromit Singer
Qiulian Wu
William A. Flavahan
Leo J.Y. Kim
Jeremy N. Rich
Briana C. Prager
Shideng Bao
Mario L. Suvà
Qi Xie
Tyler E. Miller
Stephen C. Mack
Xiuxing Wang
Aviv Regev
Xiaoguang Fang
Zhi Huang
Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Regev, Aviv
Source :
PMC
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2016.

Abstract

Brain tumor initiating cells (BTICs), also known as cancer stem cells, hijack high-affinity glucose uptake active normally in neurons to maintain energy demands. Here we link metabolic dysregulation in human BTICs to a nexus between MYC and de novo purine synthesis, mediating glucose-sustained anabolic metabolism. Inhibiting purine synthesis abrogated BTIC growth, self-renewal and in vivo tumor formation by depleting intracellular pools of purine nucleotides, supporting purine synthesis as a potential therapeutic point of fragility. In contrast, differentiated glioma cells were unaffected by the targeting of purine biosynthetic enzymes, suggesting selective dependence of BTICs. MYC coordinated the control of purine synthetic enzymes, supporting its role in metabolic reprogramming. Elevated expression of purine synthetic enzymes correlated with poor prognosis in glioblastoma patients. Collectively, our results suggest that stem-like glioma cells reprogram their metabolism to self-renew and fuel the tumor hierarchy, revealing potential BTIC cancer dependencies amenable to targeted therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PMC
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3f49f993164e9e60c288b9b5bdce1f7