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Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells

Induction of cell death represents a primary goal of most anticancer treatments. Despite the efficacy of such approaches, a small population of “persisters” develop evasion strategies to therapy-induced cell death. While previous studies have identified mechanisms of resistance to apoptosis, the mec...

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Autores principales: El-Kenawi, Asmaa, Berglund, Anders, Estrella, Veronica, Zhang, Yonghong, Liu, Min, Putney, Ryan M., Yoder, Sean J., Johnson, Joseph, Brown, Joel, Gatenby, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for Cancer Research 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9978888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36480167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-1002
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author El-Kenawi, Asmaa
Berglund, Anders
Estrella, Veronica
Zhang, Yonghong
Liu, Min
Putney, Ryan M.
Yoder, Sean J.
Johnson, Joseph
Brown, Joel
Gatenby, Robert
author_facet El-Kenawi, Asmaa
Berglund, Anders
Estrella, Veronica
Zhang, Yonghong
Liu, Min
Putney, Ryan M.
Yoder, Sean J.
Johnson, Joseph
Brown, Joel
Gatenby, Robert
author_sort El-Kenawi, Asmaa
collection PubMed
description Induction of cell death represents a primary goal of most anticancer treatments. Despite the efficacy of such approaches, a small population of “persisters” develop evasion strategies to therapy-induced cell death. While previous studies have identified mechanisms of resistance to apoptosis, the mechanisms by which persisters dampen other forms of cell death, such as pyroptosis, remain to be elucidated. Pyroptosis is a form of inflammatory cell death that involves formation of membrane pores, ion gradient imbalance, water inflow, and membrane rupture. Herein, we investigate mechanisms by which cancer persisters resist pyroptosis, survive, then proliferate in the presence of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). Lung, prostate, and esophageal cancer persister cells remaining after treatments exhibited several hallmarks indicative of pyroptosis resistance. The inflammatory attributes of persisters included chronic activation of inflammasome, STING, and type I interferons. Comprehensive metabolomic characterization uncovered that TKI-induced pyroptotic persisters display high methionine consumption and excessive taurine production. Elevated methionine flux or exogenous taurine preserved plasma membrane integrity via osmolyte-mediated effects. Increased dependency on methionine flux decreased the level of one carbon metabolism intermediate S-(5′-adenosyl)-L-homocysteine, a determinant of cell methylation capacity. The consequent increase in methylation potential induced DNA hypermethylation of genes regulating metal ion balance and intrinsic immune response. This enabled thwarting TKI resistance by using the hypomethylating agent decitabine. In summary, the evolution of resistance to pyroptosis can occur via a stepwise process of physical acclimation and epigenetic changes without existing or recurrent mutations. SIGNIFICANCE: Methionine enables cancer cells to persist by evading pyroptotic osmotic lysis, which leads to genome-wide hypermethylation that allows persisters to gain proliferative advantages.
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spelling pubmed-99788882023-03-03 Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells El-Kenawi, Asmaa Berglund, Anders Estrella, Veronica Zhang, Yonghong Liu, Min Putney, Ryan M. Yoder, Sean J. Johnson, Joseph Brown, Joel Gatenby, Robert Cancer Res Metabolism and Chemical Biology Induction of cell death represents a primary goal of most anticancer treatments. Despite the efficacy of such approaches, a small population of “persisters” develop evasion strategies to therapy-induced cell death. While previous studies have identified mechanisms of resistance to apoptosis, the mechanisms by which persisters dampen other forms of cell death, such as pyroptosis, remain to be elucidated. Pyroptosis is a form of inflammatory cell death that involves formation of membrane pores, ion gradient imbalance, water inflow, and membrane rupture. Herein, we investigate mechanisms by which cancer persisters resist pyroptosis, survive, then proliferate in the presence of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). Lung, prostate, and esophageal cancer persister cells remaining after treatments exhibited several hallmarks indicative of pyroptosis resistance. The inflammatory attributes of persisters included chronic activation of inflammasome, STING, and type I interferons. Comprehensive metabolomic characterization uncovered that TKI-induced pyroptotic persisters display high methionine consumption and excessive taurine production. Elevated methionine flux or exogenous taurine preserved plasma membrane integrity via osmolyte-mediated effects. Increased dependency on methionine flux decreased the level of one carbon metabolism intermediate S-(5′-adenosyl)-L-homocysteine, a determinant of cell methylation capacity. The consequent increase in methylation potential induced DNA hypermethylation of genes regulating metal ion balance and intrinsic immune response. This enabled thwarting TKI resistance by using the hypomethylating agent decitabine. In summary, the evolution of resistance to pyroptosis can occur via a stepwise process of physical acclimation and epigenetic changes without existing or recurrent mutations. SIGNIFICANCE: Methionine enables cancer cells to persist by evading pyroptotic osmotic lysis, which leads to genome-wide hypermethylation that allows persisters to gain proliferative advantages. American Association for Cancer Research 2023-03-02 2022-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9978888/ /pubmed/36480167 http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-1002 Text en ©2022 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.
spellingShingle Metabolism and Chemical Biology
El-Kenawi, Asmaa
Berglund, Anders
Estrella, Veronica
Zhang, Yonghong
Liu, Min
Putney, Ryan M.
Yoder, Sean J.
Johnson, Joseph
Brown, Joel
Gatenby, Robert
Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title_full Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title_fullStr Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title_full_unstemmed Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title_short Elevated Methionine Flux Drives Pyroptosis Evasion in Persister Cancer Cells
title_sort elevated methionine flux drives pyroptosis evasion in persister cancer cells
topic Metabolism and Chemical Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9978888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36480167
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-22-1002
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