Pyruvate anaplerosis is a targetable vulnerability in persistent leukaemic stem cells

Author:

Rattigan Kevin M.,Brabcova Zuzana,Sarnello Daniele,Zarou Martha M.ORCID,Roy Kiron,Kwan RyanORCID,de Beauchamp Lucie,Dawson Amy,Ianniciello Angela,Khalaf AhmedORCID,Kalkman Eric R.ORCID,Scott Mary T.ORCID,Dunn KarenORCID,Sumpton DavidORCID,Michie Alison M.ORCID,Copland MhairiORCID,Tardito SaverioORCID,Gottlieb EyalORCID,Vignir Helgason G.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractDeregulated oxidative metabolism is a hallmark of leukaemia. While tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as imatinib have increased survival of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) patients, they fail to eradicate disease-initiating leukemic stem cells (LSCs). Whether TKI-treated CML LSCs remain metabolically deregulated is unknown. Using clinically and physiologically relevant assays, we generate multi-omics datasets that offer unique insight into metabolic adaptation and nutrient fate in patient-derived CML LSCs. We demonstrate that LSCs have increased pyruvate anaplerosis, mediated by increased mitochondrial pyruvate carrier 1/2 (MPC1/2) levels and pyruvate carboxylase (PC) activity, in comparison to normal counterparts. While imatinib reverses BCR::ABL1-mediated LSC metabolic reprogramming, stable isotope-assisted metabolomics reveals that deregulated pyruvate anaplerosis is not affected by imatinib. Encouragingly, genetic ablation of pyruvate anaplerosis sensitises CML cells to imatinib. Finally, we demonstrate that MSDC-0160, a clinical orally-available MPC1/2 inhibitor, inhibits pyruvate anaplerosis and targets imatinib-resistant CML LSCs in robust pre-clinical CML models. Collectively these results highlight pyruvate anaplerosis as a persistent and therapeutically targetable vulnerability in imatinib-treated CML patient-derived samples.

Funder

Kay Kendall Leukaemia Fund

Bloodwise

Cancer Research UK

Tenovus

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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