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Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations

While the poor prognosis of glioblastoma arises from the invasion of a subset of tumor cells, little is known of the metabolic alterations within these cells that fuel invasion. We integrated spatially addressable hydrogel biomaterial platforms, patient site-directed biopsies, and multi-omics analys...

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Autores principales: Garcia, Joseph H., Akins, Erin A., Jain, Saket, Wolf, Kayla J., Zhang, Jason, Choudhary, Nikita, Lad, Meeki, Shukla, Poojan, Gill, Sabraj, Carson, Will, Carette, Luis, Zheng, Allison, Kumar, Sanjay, Aghi, Manish K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9980149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36865128
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.23.529575
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author Garcia, Joseph H.
Akins, Erin A.
Jain, Saket
Wolf, Kayla J.
Zhang, Jason
Choudhary, Nikita
Lad, Meeki
Shukla, Poojan
Gill, Sabraj
Carson, Will
Carette, Luis
Zheng, Allison
Kumar, Sanjay
Aghi, Manish K.
author_facet Garcia, Joseph H.
Akins, Erin A.
Jain, Saket
Wolf, Kayla J.
Zhang, Jason
Choudhary, Nikita
Lad, Meeki
Shukla, Poojan
Gill, Sabraj
Carson, Will
Carette, Luis
Zheng, Allison
Kumar, Sanjay
Aghi, Manish K.
author_sort Garcia, Joseph H.
collection PubMed
description While the poor prognosis of glioblastoma arises from the invasion of a subset of tumor cells, little is known of the metabolic alterations within these cells that fuel invasion. We integrated spatially addressable hydrogel biomaterial platforms, patient site-directed biopsies, and multi-omics analyses to define metabolic drivers of invasive glioblastoma cells. Metabolomics and lipidomics revealed elevations in the redox buffers cystathionine, hexosylceramides, and glucosyl ceramides in the invasive front of both hydrogel-cultured tumors and patient site-directed biopsies, with immunofluorescence indicating elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) markers in invasive cells. Transcriptomics confirmed upregulation of ROS-producing and response genes at the invasive front in both hydrogel models and patient tumors. Amongst oncologic ROS, hydrogen peroxide specifically promoted glioblastoma invasion in 3D hydrogel spheroid cultures. A CRISPR metabolic gene screen revealed cystathionine gamma lyase (CTH), which converts cystathionine to the non-essential amino acid cysteine in the transsulfuration pathway, to be essential for glioblastoma invasion. Correspondingly, supplementing CTH knockdown cells with exogenous cysteine rescued invasion. Pharmacologic CTH inhibition suppressed glioblastoma invasion, while CTH knockdown slowed glioblastoma invasion in vivo. Our studies highlight the importance of ROS metabolism in invasive glioblastoma cells and support further exploration of the transsulfuration pathway as a mechanistic and therapeutic target.
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spelling pubmed-99801492023-03-03 Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations Garcia, Joseph H. Akins, Erin A. Jain, Saket Wolf, Kayla J. Zhang, Jason Choudhary, Nikita Lad, Meeki Shukla, Poojan Gill, Sabraj Carson, Will Carette, Luis Zheng, Allison Kumar, Sanjay Aghi, Manish K. bioRxiv Article While the poor prognosis of glioblastoma arises from the invasion of a subset of tumor cells, little is known of the metabolic alterations within these cells that fuel invasion. We integrated spatially addressable hydrogel biomaterial platforms, patient site-directed biopsies, and multi-omics analyses to define metabolic drivers of invasive glioblastoma cells. Metabolomics and lipidomics revealed elevations in the redox buffers cystathionine, hexosylceramides, and glucosyl ceramides in the invasive front of both hydrogel-cultured tumors and patient site-directed biopsies, with immunofluorescence indicating elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS) markers in invasive cells. Transcriptomics confirmed upregulation of ROS-producing and response genes at the invasive front in both hydrogel models and patient tumors. Amongst oncologic ROS, hydrogen peroxide specifically promoted glioblastoma invasion in 3D hydrogel spheroid cultures. A CRISPR metabolic gene screen revealed cystathionine gamma lyase (CTH), which converts cystathionine to the non-essential amino acid cysteine in the transsulfuration pathway, to be essential for glioblastoma invasion. Correspondingly, supplementing CTH knockdown cells with exogenous cysteine rescued invasion. Pharmacologic CTH inhibition suppressed glioblastoma invasion, while CTH knockdown slowed glioblastoma invasion in vivo. Our studies highlight the importance of ROS metabolism in invasive glioblastoma cells and support further exploration of the transsulfuration pathway as a mechanistic and therapeutic target. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9980149/ /pubmed/36865128 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.23.529575 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Garcia, Joseph H.
Akins, Erin A.
Jain, Saket
Wolf, Kayla J.
Zhang, Jason
Choudhary, Nikita
Lad, Meeki
Shukla, Poojan
Gill, Sabraj
Carson, Will
Carette, Luis
Zheng, Allison
Kumar, Sanjay
Aghi, Manish K.
Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title_full Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title_fullStr Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title_full_unstemmed Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title_short Multi-omic screening of invasive GBM cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
title_sort multi-omic screening of invasive gbm cells in engineered biomaterials and patient biopsies reveals targetable transsulfuration pathway alterations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9980149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36865128
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.23.529575
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