Untargeted metabolomics identifies metabolic dysregulation of sphingolipids associated with aggressive chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and poor survival

Author:

Nguyen Van Long Flora1,Valcourt‐Gendron Délya1,Caron Patrick1,Rouleau Michèle1,Villeneuve Lyne1,Simonyan David2,Le Trang3,Sergerie Roxanne1,Laverdière Isabelle1,Vanura Katrina3,Guillemette Chantal14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Québec Research Center‐Université Laval (CRCHUQc‐UL) Faculty of Pharmacy and Centre de Recherche sur le Cancer (CRC‐UL) Université Laval Québec Canada

2. Statistical and Clinical Research Platform CRCHUQc‐UL Québec Canada

3. Department of Medicine I Division of Haematology and Haemostaseology Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

4. Canada Research Chair in Pharmacogenomics Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMetabolic dependencies of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) cells may represent new personalized treatment approaches in patients harbouring unfavourable features.MethodsHere, we used untargeted metabolomics and lipidomics analyses to isolate metabolomic features associated with aggressive CLL and poor survival outcomes. We initially focused on profiles associated with overexpression of the adverse metabolic marker glycosyltransferase (UGT2B17) associated with poor survival and drug resistance.ResultsLeukaemic B‐cell metabolomes indicated a significant perturbation in lipids, predominantly bio‐active sphingolipids. Expression of numerous enzyme‐encoding genes of sphingolipid biosynthesis pathways was significantly associated with shorter patient survival. Targeted metabolomics further exposed higher circulating levels of glucosylceramides (C16:0 GluCer) in CLL patients relative to healthy donors and an aggressive cancer biology. In multivariate analyses, C16:0 GluCer and sphinganine were independent prognostic markers and were inversely linked to treatment‐free survival. These two sphingolipid species function as antagonistic mediators, with sphinganine being pro‐apoptotic and GluCer being pro‐proliferative, tested in leukemic B‐CLL cell models. Blocking GluCer synthesis using ceramide glucosyltransferase inhibitors induced cell death and reduced the proliferative phenotype, which further sensitized a leukaemic B‐cell model to the anti‐leukaemics fludarabine and ibrutinib in vitro.ConclusionsSpecific sphingolipids may serve as prognostic markers in CLL, and inhibiting enzymatic pathways involved in their biosynthesis has potential as a therapaeutic approach.

Funder

Canada Foundation for Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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