Loss of EZH2 Reprograms BCAA Metabolism to Drive Leukemic Transformation

Zhimin Gu(Southwestern Medical Center), Yuxuan Liu(Southwestern Medical Center), Feng Cai(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), McKenzie Patrick(Southwestern Medical Center), Jakub Zmajkovic(University Hospital of Basel), Hui Cao(Southwestern Medical Center), Yuannyu Zhang(Southwestern Medical Center), Alpaslan Tasdogan(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Mingyi Chen(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Le Qi(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Xin Liu(Southwestern Medical Center), Kailong Li(Southwestern Medical Center), Junhua Lyu(Southwestern Medical Center), Kathryn E. Dickerson(Southwestern Medical Center), Weina Chen(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Min Ni(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Matthew E. Merritt(University of Miami), Sean J. Morrison(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Radek C. Skoda(University Hospital of Basel), Ralph J. DeBerardinis(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jian Xu(Southwestern Medical Center)
Cancer Discovery
June 12, 2019
Cited by 167

Abstract

Abstract Epigenetic gene regulation and metabolism are highly intertwined, yet little is known about whether altered epigenetics influence cellular metabolism during cancer progression. Here, we show that EZH2 and NRASG12D mutations cooperatively induce progression of myeloproliferative neoplasms to highly penetrant, transplantable, and lethal myeloid leukemias in mice. EZH1, an EZH2 homolog, is indispensable for EZH2-deficient leukemia-initiating cells and constitutes an epigenetic vulnerability. BCAT1, which catalyzes the reversible transamination of branched-chain amino acids (BCAA), is repressed by EZH2 in normal hematopoiesis and aberrantly activated in EZH2-deficient myeloid neoplasms in mice and humans. BCAT1 reactivation cooperates with NRASG12D to sustain intracellular BCAA pools, resulting in enhanced mTOR signaling in EZH2-deficient leukemia cells. Genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of BCAT1 selectively impairs EZH2-deficient leukemia-initiating cells and constitutes a metabolic vulnerability. Hence, epigenetic alterations rewire intracellular metabolism during leukemic transformation, causing epigenetic and metabolic vulnerabilities in cancer-initiating cells. Significance: EZH2 inactivation and oncogenic NRAS cooperate to induce leukemic transformation of myeloproliferative neoplasms by activating BCAT1 to enhance BCAA metabolism and mTOR signaling. We uncover a mechanism by which epigenetic alterations rewire metabolism during cancer progression, causing epigenetic and metabolic liabilities in cancer-initiating cells that may be exploited as potential therapeutics. See related commentary by Li and Melnick, p. 1158. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1143


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