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ATR inhibition facilitates targeting of leukemia dependence on convergent nucleotide biosynthetic pathways.

Citation
Le, T. M., et al. “Atr Inhibition Facilitates Targeting Of Leukemia Dependence On Convergent Nucleotide Biosynthetic Pathways.”. Nature Communications, p. 241.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Thuc M Le, Soumya Poddar, Joseph R Capri, Evan R Abt, Woosuk Kim, Liu Wei, Nhu T Uong, Chloe M Cheng, Daniel Braas, Mina Nikanjam, Peter Rix, Daria Merkurjev, Jesse Zaretsky, Harley I Kornblum, Antoni Ribas, Harvey R Herschman, Julian Whitelegge, Kym F Faull, Timothy R Donahue, Johannes Czernin, Caius G Radu
Abstract

Leukemia cells rely on two nucleotide biosynthetic pathways, de novo and salvage, to produce dNTPs for DNA replication. Here, using metabolomic, proteomic, and phosphoproteomic approaches, we show that inhibition of the replication stress sensing kinase ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) reduces the output of both de novo and salvage pathways by regulating the activity of their respective rate-limiting enzymes, ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) and deoxycytidine kinase (dCK), via distinct molecular mechanisms. Quantification of nucleotide biosynthesis in ATR-inhibited acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells reveals substantial remaining de novo and salvage activities, and could not eliminate the disease in vivo. However, targeting these remaining activities with RNR and dCK inhibitors triggers lethal replication stress in vitro and long-term disease-free survival in mice with B-ALL, without detectable toxicity. Thus the functional interplay between alternative nucleotide biosynthetic routes and ATR provides therapeutic opportunities in leukemia and potentially other cancers.Leukemic cells depend on the nucleotide synthesis pathway to proliferate. Here the authors use metabolomics and proteomics to show that inhibition of ATR reduced the activity of these pathways thus providing a valuable therapeutic target in leukemia.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
8
Issue
1
Number of Pages
241
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-017-00221-3
Alternate Journal
Nat Commun
PMID
28808226
PMCID
PMC5556071
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