Simultaneously Targeting Tissue Transglutaminase and
Kidney Type Glutaminase Sensitizes Cancer Cells to Acid Toxicity and
Offers New Opportunities for Therapeutic Intervention
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Abstract
Most
cancer cells undergo characteristic metabolic changes that are commonly
referred to as the Warburg effect, with one of the hallmarks being
a dramatic increase in the rate of lactic acid fermentation. This
leads to the production of protons, which in turn acidifies the microenvironment
surrounding tumors. Cancer cells have acquired resistance to acid
toxicity, allowing them to survive and grow under these detrimental
conditions. Kidney type glutaminase (GLS1), which is responsible for
the conversion of glutamine to glutamate, produces ammonia as part
of its catalytic activities and has been shown to modulate cellular
acidity. In this study, we show that tissue, or type 2, transglutaminase
(TG2), a γ-glutamyl transferase that is highly expressed in
metastatic cancers and produces ammonia as a byproduct of its catalytic
activity, is up-regulated by decreases in cellular pH and helps protect
cells from acid-induced cell death. Since both TG2 and GLS1 can similarly
function to protect cancer cells, we then proceeded to demonstrate
that treatment of a variety of cancer cell types with inhibitors of
each of these proteins results in synthetic lethality. The combination
doses of the inhibitors induce cell death, while individual treatment
with each compound shows little or no ability to kill cells. These
results suggest that combination drug treatments that simultaneously
target TG2 and GLS1 might provide an effective strategy for killing
cancer cells