Abstract 3677: DNA damage signaling activates de novo GTP synthesis to promote chemoradiation resistance in glioblastoma

Glioblastoma (GBM) is uniformly fatal due to inherent radiation (RT) and chemotherapy resistance. We have found this therapeutic resistance is mediated by alterations in tumor cellular metabolic activity. Our group and others have found that metabolites can regulate DNA repair and RT resistance in b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2023-04, Vol.83 (7_Supplement), p.3677-3677
Hauptverfasser: Scott, Andrew J., O'Brien, Alexandra M., Zhou, Weihua, Pareek, Vidhi, Sha, Zhou, Palavalasa, Sravya, Kothari, Ayesha U., Wilder-Romans, Kari, Zhang, Li, Andren, Anthony C., Chandrasekaran, Sriram, Heth, Jason, Umemura, Yoshie, Qi, Nathan, Woulfe, John, Venneti, Sriram, Morgan, Meredith A., Lawrence, Theodore S., Al-Holou, Wajd N., Lyssiotis, Costas A., Wahl, Daniel R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Glioblastoma (GBM) is uniformly fatal due to inherent radiation (RT) and chemotherapy resistance. We have found this therapeutic resistance is mediated by alterations in tumor cellular metabolic activity. Our group and others have found that metabolites can regulate DNA repair and RT resistance in brain tumors, but little is known about how DNA damage regulates metabolic pathway activity in cancer. Here, we show that DNA damage acutely increases guanine-containing purine metabolites in multiple in vitro and intracranial GBM models. By interrogating metabolic fluxes in vitro using a variety of stable isotope tracers, we confirmed RT-induced elevation in guanylates was due to increased de novo purine synthesis (DNPS) rather than activation of purine salvage. By developing and using novel stable isotope tracing methods to directly measure DNPS in awake, unrestrained mice, we confirmed that orthotopic GBMs have higher DNPS rates than adjacent cortical tissue that further increase after treatment with RT. Neither salvage synthesis of purines nor pyrimidine synthesis were impacted by RT in any intracranial tissues. With these findings, we opened a clinical study to directly measure purine synthesis in patients, and we found that human GBMs have similarly high purine synthesis rates compared to normal brain tissue. Because DNA damage activated DNPS without affecting purine salvage or pyrimidine synthesis, we reasoned that active signaling may be involved. Indeed, therapy-induced DNPS increases are lost in vitro and in vivo upon pharmacological or genomic inhibition of the DNA-damage sensing kinase DNA-PK. Moreover, RT and DNA-PK have direct influence over the spatial organization of DNPS enzymes, including IMPDH, the rate-limiting step in guanylate synthesis. Because purines can promote DNA repair, these findings suggest that DNA-PK signaling helps promote DNA repair in part by causing the spatial reorganization of DNPS enzymes, thereby activating purine synthesis. To determine if disrupting this regulation can augment GBM treatment efficacy, we combined an FDA-approved inhibitor of purine synthesis with chemoradiation in a variety of mouse models of GBM. Critically, targeting GTP synthesis improved the efficacy of both RT alone and chemoradiation in multiple patient-derived and syngeneic intracranial models, suggesting a potential therapeutic targeting opportunity in patients. In this study, we have developed novel methodology to directly measure purine synthesi
ISSN:1538-7445
1538-7445
DOI:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2023-3677