Back to Search Start Over

Serine synthesis pathway inhibition cooperates with dietary serine and glycine limitation for cancer therapy

Authors :
Vipin Suri
Mylène Tajan
Owen J. Sansom
Vivian S. W. Li
Rachel A. Ridgway
Laura Novellasdemunt
Eric C. Cheung
Robert L. Ludwig
Marc Hennequart
Nathalie Legrave
Nicola Valeri
Georgios Vlachogiannis
Fabio Zani
Andreas K. Hock
Alejandro Suárez-Bonnet
Nello Mainolfi
Karen Blyth
Mark Manfredi
Adam L. Friedman
Nikolaos Angelis
Karen H. Vousden
Oliver D. K. Maddocks
Dimitris Athineos
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Many tumour cells show dependence on exogenous serine and dietary serine and glycine starvation can inhibit the growth of these cancers and extend survival in mice. However, numerous mechanisms promote resistance to this therapeutic approach, including enhanced expression of the de novo serine synthesis pathway (SSP) enzymes or activation of oncogenes that drive enhanced serine synthesis. Here we show that inhibition of PHGDH, the first step in the SSP, cooperates with serine and glycine depletion to inhibit one-carbon metabolism and cancer growth. In vitro, inhibition of PHGDH combined with serine starvation leads to a defect in global protein synthesis, which blocks the activation of an ATF-4 response and more broadly impacts the protective stress response to amino acid depletion. In vivo, the combination of diet and inhibitor shows therapeutic efficacy against tumours that are resistant to diet or drug alone, with evidence of reduced one-carbon availability. However, the defect in ATF4-response seen in vitro following complete depletion of available serine is not seen in mice, where dietary serine and glycine depletion and treatment with the PHGDH inhibitor lower but do not eliminate serine. Our results indicate that inhibition of PHGDH will augment the therapeutic efficacy of a serine depleted diet.<br />Dietary serine and glycine starvation has emerged as a potential therapy for cancer. Here, the authors show that inhibition of PHGDH, which mediates the first step in the serine synthesis pathway, improves the therapeutic efficacy of serine depletion diet in mouse xenograft models.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f606433f50b018c4e02014a01e9a1511