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Combined Inactivation of CTPS1 and ATR Is Synthetically Lethal to MYC-Overexpressing Cancer Cells

Zhe Sun, Ziheng Zhang, Qiao-Qi Wang, Ji-Long Liu

2022Cancer Research54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The "undruggable" oncogene MYC supports cancer cell proliferation and survival through parallel induction of multiple anabolic processes. Here we find that inhibiting CTP synthase (CTPS) selectively decreases cell viability and induces DNA replication stress in MYC-overexpressing cells. MYC-driven rRNA synthesis caused the selective DNA replication stress upon CTPS inhibition. Combined inhibition of CTPS and ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) is synthetically lethal in MYC-overexpressing cells, promoting cell death in vitro and decreasing tumor growth in vivo. Unexpectedly, interfering with CTPS1 but not CTPS2 is required to induce replication stress in MYC-deregulated cancer cells and consequent cell death in the presence of an ATR inhibitor. These results highlight a specific and key role of CTPS1 in MYC-driven cancer, suggesting that selectively inhibiting CTPS1 in combination with ATR could be a promising strategy to combat disease progression. SIGNIFICANCE: Inhibition of CTPS in MYC-overexpressing cells blocks pyrimidine synthesis while maintaining ribosome synthesis activity to create an anabolic imbalance that induces replication stress, providing a new approach to selectively target MYC-driven cancer. See related commentary by Chabanon and Postel-Vinay, p. 969.

Topics & Concepts

Cancer cellAnabolismTranslation (biology)CancerChemistryCancer researchRibosomeCell biologyPyrimidineProtein biosynthesisBiologyPyrimidine metabolismBiochemistryCancer treatmentComputational biologyCellTumor cellsBiochemical and Molecular ResearchRNA modifications and cancerEnzyme Structure and Function
Combined Inactivation of CTPS1 and ATR Is Synthetically Lethal to MYC-Overexpressing Cancer Cells | Litcius