Rewiring glucose metabolism improves 5-FU efficacy in p53-deficient/KRASG12D glycolytic colorectal tumors

Despite the fact that 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is the backbone for chemotherapy in colorectal cancer (CRC), the response rates in patients is limited to 50%. The mechanisms underlying 5-FU toxicity are debated, limiting the development of strategies to improve its efficacy. How fundamental aspects of c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2022-10, Vol.5 (1), Article 1159
Hauptverfasser: Ludikhuize, Marlies C., Gevers, Sira, Nguyen, Nguyen T. B., Meerlo, Maaike, Roudbari, S. Khadijeh Shafiei, Gulersonmez, M. Can, Stigter, Edwin C. A., Drost, Jarno, Clevers, Hans, Burgering, Boudewijn M. T., Rodríguez Colman, Maria J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the fact that 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is the backbone for chemotherapy in colorectal cancer (CRC), the response rates in patients is limited to 50%. The mechanisms underlying 5-FU toxicity are debated, limiting the development of strategies to improve its efficacy. How fundamental aspects of cancer, such as driver mutations and phenotypic heterogeneity, relate to the 5-FU response remains obscure. This largely relies on the limited number of studies performed in pre-clinical models able to recapitulate the key features of CRC. Here, we analyzed the 5-FU response in patient-derived organoids that reproduce the different stages of CRC. We find that 5-FU induces pyrimidine imbalance, which leads to DNA damage and cell death in the actively proliferating cancer cells deficient in p53. Importantly, p53-deficiency leads to cell death due to impaired cell cycle arrest. Moreover, we find that targeting the Warburg effect in KRAS G12D glycolytic tumor organoids enhances 5-FU toxicity by further altering the nucleotide pool and, importantly, without affecting non-transformed WT cells. Thus, p53 emerges as an important factor in determining the 5-FU response, and targeting cancer metabolism in combination with replication stress-inducing chemotherapies emerges as a promising strategy for CRC treatment. In p53-deficient colorectal cancer organoids, 5-fluorouracil induces pyrimidine imbalance, which causes DNA damage and cell death. Rewiring glucose metabolism through PDK inhibition by DCA enhances 5-FU toxicity in glycolytic p53-deficient organoids.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-022-04055-8