Litcius/Paper detail

Porphyrin overdrive rewires cancer cell metabolism

Swamy R. Adapa, Gregory A. Hunter, Narmin E. Amin, Christopher Marinescu, Andrew Borsky, Elizabeth M. Sagatys, Saı̈d M. Sebti, Gary W. Reuther, Glória C. Ferreira, Rays H. Y. Jiang

2024Life Science Alliance24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

All cancer cells reprogram metabolism to support aberrant growth. Here, we report that cancer cells employ and depend on imbalanced and dynamic heme metabolic pathways, to accumulate heme intermediates, that is, porphyrins. We coined this essential metabolic rewiring "porphyrin overdrive" and determined that it is cancer-essential and cancer-specific. Among the major drivers are genes encoding mid-step enzymes governing the production of heme intermediates. CRISPR/Cas9 editing to engineer leukemia cell lines with impaired heme biosynthetic steps confirmed our whole-genome data analyses that porphyrin overdrive is linked to oncogenic states and cellular differentiation. Although porphyrin overdrive is absent in differentiated cells or somatic stem cells, it is present in patient-derived tumor progenitor cells, demonstrated by single-cell RNAseq, and in early embryogenesis. In conclusion, we identified a dependence of cancer cells on non-homeostatic heme metabolism, and we targeted this cancer metabolic vulnerability with a novel "bait-and-kill" strategy to eradicate malignant cells.

Topics & Concepts

HemeCancer cellPorphyrinCancerBiologyCancer stem cellCRISPRSomatic cellCellBiochemistryCell biologyProgenitor cellStem cellCancer researchEnzymeGeneticsGeneCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismAutophagy in Disease and TherapyRNA modifications and cancer