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MYC-driven inhibition of the glutamate-cysteine ligase promotes glutathione depletion in liver cancer.

Citation
Anderton, B., et al. “Myc-Driven Inhibition Of The Glutamate-Cysteine Ligase Promotes Glutathione Depletion In Liver Cancer.”. Embo Reports, pp. 569-585.
Author Brittany Anderton, Roman Camarda, Sanjeev Balakrishnan, Asha Balakrishnan, Rebecca A Kohnz, Lionel Lim, Kimberley J Evason, Olga Momcilovic, Klaus Kruttwig, Qiang Huang, Guowang Xu, Daniel K Nomura, Andrei Goga
Keywords MYC, cancer, glutathione, Metabolism, miRNA
Abstract

How MYC reprograms metabolism in primary tumors remains poorly understood. Using integrated gene expression and metabolite profiling, we identify six pathways that are coordinately deregulated in primary MYC-driven liver tumors: glutathione metabolism; glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism; aminoacyl-tRNA biosynthesis; cysteine and methionine metabolism; ABC transporters; and mineral absorption. We then focus our attention on glutathione (GSH) and glutathione disulfide (GSSG), as they are markedly decreased in MYC-driven tumors. We find that fewer glutamine-derived carbons are incorporated into GSH in tumor tissue relative to non-tumor tissue. Expression of GCLC, the rate-limiting enzyme of GSH synthesis, is attenuated by the MYC-induced microRNA miR-18a. Inhibition of miR-18a leads to increased GCLC protein expression and GSH abundance in tumor tissue. Finally, MYC-driven liver tumors exhibit increased sensitivity to acute oxidative stress. In summary, MYC-dependent attenuation of GCLC by miR-18a contributes to GSH depletion , and low GSH corresponds with increased sensitivity to oxidative stress in tumors. Our results identify new metabolic pathways deregulated in primary MYC tumors and implicate a role for MYC in regulating a major antioxidant pathway downstream of glutamine.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
EMBO reports
Volume
18
Issue
4
Number of Pages
569-585
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1469-3178
DOI
10.15252/embr.201643068
Alternate Journal
EMBO Rep.
PMID
28219903
PMCID
PMC5376764
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