MYC-Driven Small-Cell Lung Cancer is Metabolically Distinct and Vulnerable to Arginine Depletion

Milind D. Chalishazar(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Sarah J. Wait(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Fang Huang(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Abbie S. Ireland(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Anandaroop Mukhopadhyay(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Younjee Lee(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Sophia Schuman(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Matthew R. Guthrie(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Kristofer C. Berrett(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Jeffery M. Vahrenkamp(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Zeping Hu(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Marek Kudła(University of California, Berkeley), Katarzyna Modzelewska(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Guoying Wang(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Nicholas T. Ingolia(University of California, Berkeley), Jason Gertz(Huntsman Cancer Institute), David H. Lum(Huntsman Cancer Institute), Sabina Cosulich(AstraZeneca (United Kingdom)), John S. Bomalaski(Portola Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Ralph J. DeBerardinis(Southwestern Medical Center), Trudy G. Oliver(Huntsman Cancer Institute)
Clinical Cancer Research
June 4, 2019
Cited by 181

Abstract

PURPOSE: Small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) has been treated clinically as a homogeneous disease, but recent discoveries suggest that SCLC is heterogeneous. Whether metabolic differences exist among SCLC subtypes is largely unexplored. In this study, we aimed to determine whether metabolic vulnerabilities exist between SCLC subtypes that can be therapeutically exploited. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed steady state metabolomics on tumors isolated from distinct genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM) representing the MYC- and MYCL-driven subtypes of SCLC. Using genetic and pharmacologic approaches, we validated our findings in chemo-naïve and -resistant human SCLC cell lines, multiple GEMMs, four human cell line xenografts, and four newly derived PDX models. RESULTS: We discover that SCLC subtypes driven by different MYC family members have distinct metabolic profiles. MYC-driven SCLC preferentially depends on arginine-regulated pathways including polyamine biosynthesis and mTOR pathway activation. Chemo-resistant SCLC cells exhibit increased MYC expression and similar metabolic liabilities as chemo-naïve MYC-driven cells. Arginine depletion with pegylated arginine deiminase (ADI-PEG 20) dramatically suppresses tumor growth and promotes survival of mice specifically with MYC-driven tumors, including in GEMMs, human cell line xenografts, and a patient-derived xenograft from a relapsed patient. Finally, ADI-PEG 20 is significantly more effective than the standard-of-care chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: These data identify metabolic heterogeneity within SCLC and suggest arginine deprivation as a subtype-specific therapeutic vulnerability for MYC-driven SCLC.


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