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Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells

Reprogramming of energy metabolism is regarded as one of the hallmarks of cancer; in particular, oncogenic RAS has been shown to be a critical regulator of cancer metabolism. Recently, asparagine metabolism has been heavily investigated as a novel target for cancer treatment. For example, Knott et a...

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Autores principales: Nishikawa, Gen, Kawada, Kenji, Hanada, Keita, Maekawa, Hisatsugu, Itatani, Yoshiro, Miyoshi, Hiroyuki, Taketo, Makoto Mark, Obama, Kazutaka
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9600002/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36291140
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11203273
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author Nishikawa, Gen
Kawada, Kenji
Hanada, Keita
Maekawa, Hisatsugu
Itatani, Yoshiro
Miyoshi, Hiroyuki
Taketo, Makoto Mark
Obama, Kazutaka
author_facet Nishikawa, Gen
Kawada, Kenji
Hanada, Keita
Maekawa, Hisatsugu
Itatani, Yoshiro
Miyoshi, Hiroyuki
Taketo, Makoto Mark
Obama, Kazutaka
author_sort Nishikawa, Gen
collection PubMed
description Reprogramming of energy metabolism is regarded as one of the hallmarks of cancer; in particular, oncogenic RAS has been shown to be a critical regulator of cancer metabolism. Recently, asparagine metabolism has been heavily investigated as a novel target for cancer treatment. For example, Knott et al. showed that asparagine bioavailability governs metastasis in a breast cancer model. Gwinn et al. reported the therapeutic vulnerability of asparagine biosynthesis in KRAS-driven non-small cell lung cancer. We previously reported that KRAS-mutated CRC cells can adapt to glutamine depletion through upregulation of asparagine synthetase (ASNS), an enzyme that synthesizes asparagine from aspartate. In our previous study, we assessed the efficacy of asparagine depletion using human cancer cell lines. In the present study, we evaluated the clinical relevance of asparagine depletion using a novel patient-derived spheroid xenograft (PDSX) mouse model. First, we examined ASNS expression in 38 spheroid lines and found that 12 lines (12/37, 32.4%) displayed high ASNS expression, whereas 26 lines (25/37, 67.6%) showed no ASNS expression. Next, to determine the role of asparagine metabolism in tumor growth, we established ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines using lentiviral short hairpin RNA constructs targeting ASNS. An in vitro cell proliferation assay demonstrated a significant decrease in cell proliferation upon asparagine depletion in the ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines, and this was not observed in the control spheroids lines. In addition, we examined asparagine inhibition with the anti-leukemia drug L-asparaginase (L-Asp) and observed a considerable reduction in cell proliferation at a low concentration (0.1 U/mL) in the ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines, whereas it exhibited limited inhibition of control spheroid lines at the same concentration. Finally, we used the PDSX model to assess the effects of asparagine depletion on tumor growth in vivo. The nude mice injected with ASNS-knockdown or control spheroid lines were administered with L-Asp once a day for 28 days. Surprisingly, in mice injected with ASNS-knockdown spheroids, the administration of L-Asp dramatically inhibited tumor engraftment. On the other hands, in mice injected with control spheroids, the administration of L-Asp had no effect on tumor growth inhibition at all. These results suggest that ASNS inhibition could be critical in targeting asparagine metabolism in cancers.
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spelling pubmed-96000022022-10-27 Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells Nishikawa, Gen Kawada, Kenji Hanada, Keita Maekawa, Hisatsugu Itatani, Yoshiro Miyoshi, Hiroyuki Taketo, Makoto Mark Obama, Kazutaka Cells Article Reprogramming of energy metabolism is regarded as one of the hallmarks of cancer; in particular, oncogenic RAS has been shown to be a critical regulator of cancer metabolism. Recently, asparagine metabolism has been heavily investigated as a novel target for cancer treatment. For example, Knott et al. showed that asparagine bioavailability governs metastasis in a breast cancer model. Gwinn et al. reported the therapeutic vulnerability of asparagine biosynthesis in KRAS-driven non-small cell lung cancer. We previously reported that KRAS-mutated CRC cells can adapt to glutamine depletion through upregulation of asparagine synthetase (ASNS), an enzyme that synthesizes asparagine from aspartate. In our previous study, we assessed the efficacy of asparagine depletion using human cancer cell lines. In the present study, we evaluated the clinical relevance of asparagine depletion using a novel patient-derived spheroid xenograft (PDSX) mouse model. First, we examined ASNS expression in 38 spheroid lines and found that 12 lines (12/37, 32.4%) displayed high ASNS expression, whereas 26 lines (25/37, 67.6%) showed no ASNS expression. Next, to determine the role of asparagine metabolism in tumor growth, we established ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines using lentiviral short hairpin RNA constructs targeting ASNS. An in vitro cell proliferation assay demonstrated a significant decrease in cell proliferation upon asparagine depletion in the ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines, and this was not observed in the control spheroids lines. In addition, we examined asparagine inhibition with the anti-leukemia drug L-asparaginase (L-Asp) and observed a considerable reduction in cell proliferation at a low concentration (0.1 U/mL) in the ASNS-knockdown spheroid lines, whereas it exhibited limited inhibition of control spheroid lines at the same concentration. Finally, we used the PDSX model to assess the effects of asparagine depletion on tumor growth in vivo. The nude mice injected with ASNS-knockdown or control spheroid lines were administered with L-Asp once a day for 28 days. Surprisingly, in mice injected with ASNS-knockdown spheroids, the administration of L-Asp dramatically inhibited tumor engraftment. On the other hands, in mice injected with control spheroids, the administration of L-Asp had no effect on tumor growth inhibition at all. These results suggest that ASNS inhibition could be critical in targeting asparagine metabolism in cancers. MDPI 2022-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9600002/ /pubmed/36291140 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11203273 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Nishikawa, Gen
Kawada, Kenji
Hanada, Keita
Maekawa, Hisatsugu
Itatani, Yoshiro
Miyoshi, Hiroyuki
Taketo, Makoto Mark
Obama, Kazutaka
Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_full Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_fullStr Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_full_unstemmed Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_short Targeting Asparagine Synthetase in Tumorgenicity Using Patient-Derived Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_sort targeting asparagine synthetase in tumorgenicity using patient-derived tumor-initiating cells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9600002/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36291140
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11203273
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