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Cysteine induces mitochondrial reductive stress in glioblastoma through hydrogen peroxide production

Evan Noch, Laura Palma, Isaiah Yim, Nayah Bullen, Daniel Barnett, Alexander Walsh, Bhavneet Bhinder, Elisa Benedetti, Jan Krumsiek, Justin Gurvitch, Sumaiyah Khwaja, Daphné Atlas, Olivier Elemento, Lewis C. Cantley

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Glucose and amino acid metabolism are critical for glioblastoma (GBM) growth, but little is known about the specific metabolic alterations in GBM that are targetable with FDA-approved compounds. To investigate tumor metabolism signatures unique to GBM, we interrogated The Cancer Genome Atlas for alterations in glucose and amino acid signatures in GBM relative to other human cancers and found that GBM exhibits the highest levels of cysteine and methionine pathway gene expression of 32 human cancers. Treatment of patient-derived GBM cells with the FDA-approved single cysteine compound N-acetylcysteine (NAC) reduced GBM cell growth and mitochondrial oxygen consumption, which was worsened by glucose starvation. Normal brain cells and other cancer cells showed no response to NAC. Mechanistic experiments revealed that cysteine compounds induce rapid mitochondrial H 2 O 2 production and reductive stress in GBM cells, an effect blocked by oxidized glutathione, thioredoxin, and redox enzyme overexpression. From analysis of the clinical proteomic tumor analysis consortium (CPTAC) database, we found that GBM cells exhibit lower expression of mitochondrial redox enzymes than four other cancers whose proteomic data are available in CPTAC. Knockdown of mitochondrial thioredoxin-2 in lung cancer cells induced NAC susceptibility, indicating the importance of mitochondrial redox enzyme expression in mitigating reductive stress. Intraperitoneal treatment of mice bearing orthotopic GBM xenografts with a two-cysteine peptide induced H 2 O 2 in brain tumors in vivo. These findings indicate that GBM is uniquely susceptible to NAC-driven reductive stress and could synergize with glucose-lowering treatments for GBM.

Topics & Concepts

ThioredoxinBiologyCysteineMitochondrionCancer researchGlutathioneOxidative stressMolecular biologyGene knockdownCell growthBiochemistryEnzymeApoptosisCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismAmino Acid Enzymes and MetabolismSulfur Compounds in Biology