Electron transport chain inhibition increases cellular dependence on purine transport and salvage

Zheng Wu(Children's Medical Center), Divya Bezwada(Children's Medical Center), Feng Cai(Children's Medical Center), Robert C. Harris(Children's Medical Center), Bookyung Ko(Children's Medical Center), Varun Sondhi(Children's Medical Center), Chunxiao Pan(Children's Medical Center), Hieu Vu(Children's Medical Center), Phong Nguyen(Children's Medical Center), Brandon Faubert(University of Chicago), Ling Cai(Children's Medical Center), Hongli Chen(Children's Medical Center), Misty S. Martin-Sandoval(Children's Medical Center), Duyen Do(Children's Medical Center), Wen Gu(Children's Medical Center), Yuanyuan Zhang(Children's Medical Center), Yuannyu Zhang(Children's Medical Center), Bailey Brooks(Children's Medical Center), Sherwin Kelekar(Children's Medical Center), Lauren G. Zacharias(Children's Medical Center), K. Celeste Oaxaca(Children's Medical Center), João S. Patrício(Children's Medical Center), Thomas P. Mathews(Children's Medical Center), Javier García‐Bermúdez(Children's Medical Center), Min Ni(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Ralph J. DeBerardinis(Southwestern Medical Center)
Cell Metabolism
June 13, 2024
Cited by 83Open Access
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Abstract

Mitochondria house many metabolic pathways required for homeostasis and growth. To explore how human cells respond to mitochondrial dysfunction, we performed metabolomics in fibroblasts from patients with various mitochondrial disorders and cancer cells with electron transport chain (ETC) blockade. These analyses revealed extensive perturbations in purine metabolism, and stable isotope tracing demonstrated that ETC defects suppress de novo purine synthesis while enhancing purine salvage. In human lung cancer, tumors with markers of low oxidative mitochondrial metabolism exhibit enhanced expression of the salvage enzyme hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase 1 (HPRT1) and high levels of the HPRT1 product inosine monophosphate. Mechanistically, ETC blockade activates the pentose phosphate pathway, providing phosphoribosyl diphosphate to drive purine salvage supplied by uptake of extracellular bases. Blocking HPRT1 sensitizes cancer cells to ETC inhibition. These findings demonstrate how cells remodel purine metabolism upon ETC blockade and uncover a new metabolic vulnerability in tumors with low respiration.


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