22 research outputs found

    Inhibiting PHGDH with NCT-503 reroutes glucose-derived carbons into the TCA cycle, independently of its on-target effect

    Get PDF
    The small-molecule inhibitor of phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, NCT-503, reduces incorporation of glucose-derived carbons into serine in vitro. Here we describe an off-target effect of NCT-503 in neuroblastoma cell lines expressing divergent phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH) levels and single-cell clones with CRISPR-Cas9-directed PHGDH knockout or their respective wildtype controls. NCT-503 treatment strongly reduced synthesis of glucose-derived citrate in all cell models investigated compared to the inactive drug control and independent of PHGDH expression level. Incorporation of glucose-derived carbons entering the TCA cycle via pyruvate carboxylase was enhanced by NCT-503 treatment. The activity of citrate synthase was not altered by NCT-503 treatment. We also detected no change in the thermal stabilisation of citrate synthase in cellular thermal shift assays from NCT-503-treated cells. Thus, the direct cause of the observed off-target effect remains enigmatic. Our findings highlight off-target potential within a metabolic assessment of carbon usage in cells treated with the small-molecule inhibitor, NCT-503

    Inhibiting phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase counteracts chemotherapeutic efficacy against MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma

    Get PDF
    Here we sought metabolic alterations specifically associated with MYCN amplification as nodes to indirectly target the MYCN oncogene. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based proteomics identified 7 proteins consistently correlated with MYCN in proteomes from 49 neuroblastoma biopsies and 13 cell lines. Among these was phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH), the rate-limiting enzyme in de novo serine synthesis. MYCN associated with two regions in the PHGDH promoter, supporting transcriptional PHGDH regulation by MYCN. Pulsed stable isotope-resolved metabolomics utilizing (13)C-glucose labeling demonstrated higher de novo serine synthesis in MYCN-amplified cells compared to cells with diploid MYCN. An independence of MYCN-amplified cells from exogenous serine and glycine was demonstrated by serine and glycine starvation, which attenuated nucleotide pools and proliferation only in cells with diploid MYCN but did not diminish these endpoints in MYCN-amplified cells. Proliferation was attenuated in MYCN-amplified cells by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated PHGDH knockout or treatment with PHGDH small molecule inhibitors without affecting cell viability. PHGDH inhibitors administered as single-agent therapy to NOG mice harboring patient-derived MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma xenografts slowed tumor growth. However, combining a PHGDH inhibitor with the standard-of-care chemotherapy drug, cisplatin, revealed antagonism of chemotherapy efficacy in vivo. Emergence of chemotherapy resistance was confirmed in the genetic PHGDH knockout model in vitro. Altogether, PHGDH knockout or inhibition by small molecules consistently slows proliferation, but stops short of killing the cells, which then establish resistance to classical chemotherapy. Although PHGDH inhibition with small molecules has produced encouraging results in other preclinical cancer models, this approach has limited attractiveness for patients with neuroblastoma

    Circulating cell-free DNA assessment in biofluids from children with neuroblastoma demonstrates feasibility and potential for minimally invasive molecular diagnostics

    Get PDF
    Liquid biopsy strategies in pediatric patients are challenging due to low body weight. This study investigated cfDNA size distribution and concentration in blood, bone marrow, cerebrospinal fluid, and urine from 84 patients with neuroblastoma classified as low (n = 28), intermediate (n = 6), or high risk (n = 50) to provide key data for liquid biopsy biobanking strategies. The average volume of blood and bone marrow plasma provided ranged between 1 and 2 mL. Analysis of 637 DNA electropherograms obtained by Agilent TapeStation measurement revealed five different major profiles and characteristic DNA size distribution patterns for each of the biofluids. The proportion of samples containing primarily cfDNA was, at 85.5%, the highest for blood plasma. The median cfDNA concentration amounted to 6.28 ng/mL (blood plasma), 58.2 ng/mL (bone marrow plasma), 0.08 ng/mL (cerebrospinal fluid), and 0.49 ng/mL (urine) in samples. Meta-analysis of the dataset demonstrated that multiple cfDNA-based assays employing the same biofluid sample optimally require sampling volumes of 1 mL for blood and bone marrow plasma, 2 mL for cerebrospinal fluid, and as large as possible for urine samples. A favorable response to treatment was associated with a rapid decrease in blood-based cfDNA concentration in patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. Blood-based cfDNA concentration was not sufficient as a single parameter to indicate high-risk disease recurrence. We provide proof of concept that monitoring neuroblastoma-specific markers in very small blood volumes from infants is feasible

    A Cre-conditional MYCN-driven neuroblastoma mouse model as an improved tool for preclinical studies

    Get PDF
    Neuroblastoma, a childhood cancer that originates from neural crest-derived cells, is the most common deadly solid tumor of infancy. Amplification of the MYCN oncogene, which occurs in approximately 20-25% of human neuroblastomas, is the most prominent genetic marker of high-stage disease. The availability of valid preclinical in vivo models is a prerequisite to develop novel targeted therapies. We here report on the generation of transgenic mice with Cre-conditional induction of MYCN in dopamine β-hydroxylase-expressing cells, termed LSL-MYCN;Dbh-iCre. These mice develop neuroblastic tumors with an incidence of >75%, regardless of strain background. Molecular profiling of tumors revealed upregulation of the MYCN-dependent miR-17-92 cluster as well as expression of neuroblastoma marker genes, including tyrosine hydroxylase and the neural cell adhesion molecule 1. Gene set enrichment analyses demonstrated significant correlation with MYC-associated expression patterns. Array comparative genome hybridization showed that chromosomal aberrations in LSL-MYCN;Dbh-iCre tumors were syntenic to those observed in human neuroblastomas. Treatment of a cell line established from a tumor derived from a LSL-MYCN;Dbh-iCre mouse with JQ1 or MLN8237 reduced cell viability and demonstrated oncogene addiction to MYCN. Here we report establishment of the first Cre-conditional human MYCN-driven mouse model for neuroblastoma that closely recapitulates the human disease with respect to tumor localization, histology, marker expression and genomic make up. This mouse model is a valuable tool for further functional studies and to assess the effect of targeted therapies

    Defining the landscape of circular RNAs in neuroblastoma unveils a global suppressive function of MYCN

    Get PDF
    Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a regulatory RNA class. While cancer-driving functions have been identified for single circRNAs, how they modulate gene expression in cancer is not well understood. We investigate circRNA expression in the pediatric malignancy, neuroblastoma, through deep whole-transcriptome sequencing in 104 primary neuroblastomas covering all risk groups. We demonstrate that MYCN amplification, which defines a subset of high-risk cases, causes globally suppressed circRNA biogenesis directly dependent on the DHX9 RNA helicase. We detect similar mechanisms in shaping circRNA expression in the pediatric cancer medulloblastoma implying a general MYCN effect. Comparisons to other cancers identify 25 circRNAs that are specifically upregulated in neuroblastoma, including circARID1A. Transcribed from the ARID1A tumor suppressor gene, circARID1A promotes cell growth and survival, mediated by direct interaction with the KHSRP RNA-binding protein. Our study highlights the importance of MYCN regulating circRNAs in cancer and identifies molecular mechanisms, which explain their contribution to neuroblastoma pathogenesis

    A deep dive into the circulating ctDNA cosmos to vanquish neuroblastoma

    No full text
    Single biopsies fail to reflect intratumor heterogeneity and tumor evolution. In this issue of Cancer Discovery, Bosse and colleagues show an important role for circulating cell-free tumor DNA sequencing to detect the genomic evolution of neuroblastoma under ALK inhibitor therapy and identify novel (sub)clonal pathogenic variants involved in disease progression under conventional therapy. See related article by Bosse et al., p. 2800 (5)

    ALK pERKs up MYCN in neuroblastoma

    No full text
    The gene expressing the receptor tyrosine kinase anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is mutated and aberrantly expressed in several cancers. The clinical efficacy of the ALK inhibitor, crizotinib, lags behind expectations for treating MYCN-amplified, ALK-mutant neuroblastoma, a deadly childhood cancer. In this issue of Science Signaling, Umapathy et al. identify the kinase extracellular signal-regulated kinase 5 (ERK5) as a central mediator that enables ALK to boost MYCN expression, and they show that inhibiting ERK5 in concert with ALK reduced neuroblastoma cell viability in vitro and in xenograft tumor models. This report has important clinical implications for the treatment of patients with neuroblastoma or other tumors that overexpress MYC(N) and harbor ALK mutations, such as non-small-cell lung cancer

    Databases for Systems Biology

    No full text
    The ultimate goal of researchers in the interdisciplinary field of systems biology is to solve biological problems at the level of an entire system. Achieving this goal requires supporting the efforts of experimental biologists and computational modelers. Optimally, the phases of planning, actual experimentation, and data analysis (as well as model development, testing, and validation) would all be supported by one database solution. There is currently no integrative source for all information required in a computer-generated model of a biological system, and no system capable of providing support for all three phases of a systems biology endeavor. We present the concept of an integrative database for systems biology that functions as a data warehouse system and supports all three phases of a systems biology project. This database system consists of three modules with different data models supporting the particular requirements of utilizing the three general types of data required: experimental data, components, and reactions of biological systems and mathematical models. The model and experiment modules are linked through the component/reaction module, eliminating the need to store complete information about any one entity more than once in the database. Complete functional models and simulations of particular interest are stored as SBML (Systems Biology Markup Language) files and linked to all necessary information within the database. This combination of modules tailored for dealing with the different data types and the interaction of these modules via links will meet the needs of researchers in the area of systems biology. Copyright © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. [accessed 2014 February 12th

    Targeted Therapy for Neuroblastoma: ALK Inhibitors

    No full text
    Treatment for neuroblastoma, the most common extracranial childhood tumor, spans a broad range of aggressiveness that mirrors the risk profiles of disease subtypes, with high-risk neuroblastoma still presenting a clinical challenge. Currently, most patients with relapsed neuroblastoma die of disease and present a major challenge for treatment. New therapeutic options are urgently needed to improve patient survival. Activating mutations in the gene encoding the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) remain the most frequent druggable mutations identified in neuroblastomas to date. Preclinical data support an oncogene addiction of neuroblastoma cells to mutated ALK and demonstrate that ALK inhibitory therapy strongly combats tumor models. Most recently, pediatric phase I testing has been completed for the first approved ALK inhibitor, Crizotinib, showing very encouraging antitumoral results in neuroblastoma patients. Subsequently, an international phase I study with the second generation ALK inhibitor, LDK-378, will be launched that makes ALK inhibitory therapy also available to pediatric patients in Germany
    corecore