Adaptive stimulation of macropinocytosis overcomes aspartate limitation in cancer cells under hypoxia

Javier García‐Bermúdez(Rockefeller University), Sheela Prasad(New York University), Lou Baudrier(Rockefeller University), Michael A. Badgley(New York University), Yuyang Liu(Rockefeller University), Konnor La(Rockefeller University), Mariluz Soula(Rockefeller University), Robert T. Williams(Rockefeller University), Norihiro Yamaguchi(Rockefeller University), Rosa F. Hwang(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Laura Taylor(New York University), Elisa de Stanchina(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Bety Rostandy(Rockefeller University), Hanan Alwaseem(Rockefeller University), Henrik Molina(Rockefeller University), Dafna Bar‐Sagi(New York University), Kıvanç Birsoy(Rockefeller University)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
February 3, 2021
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Stress-adaptive mechanisms enable tumor cells to overcome metabolic constraints in nutrient and oxygen poor tumors. Aspartate is an endogenous metabolic limitation under hypoxic conditions, but the nature of the adaptive mechanisms that contribute to aspartate availability and hypoxic tumor growth are poorly understood. Here, using a combination of metabolomics and CRISPR-based genetic screens, we identify GOT2-catalyzed mitochondrial aspartate synthesis as an essential metabolic dependency for the proliferation of pancreatic tumor cells under hypoxic culture conditions. In contrast, GOT2-catalyzed aspartate synthesis is dispensable for pancreatic tumor formation in vivo . The dependence of pancreatic tumor cells on aspartate synthesis is bypassed in part by a hypoxia-induced potentiation of extracellular protein scavenging via macropinocytosis. This effect is mutant KRas-dependent, and is mediated by hypoxia inducible factor 1 (HIF1A) and its canonical target carbonic anhydrase-9 (CA9) through the cooption of the bicarbonate-macropinocytosis signaling axis. Our findings reveal high plasticity of aspartate metabolism and define an adaptive regulatory role for macropinocytosis by which mutant KRas tumors can overcome nutrient deprivation under hypoxic conditions.


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