Homozygous MTAP deletion in primary human glioblastoma is not associated with elevation of methylthioadenosine

Author:

Barekatain YasamanORCID,Ackroyd Jeffrey J.,Yan Victoria C.ORCID,Khadka Sunada,Wang Lin,Chen Ko-Chien,Poral Anton H.,Tran Theresa,Georgiou Dimitra K.ORCID,Arthur Kenisha,Lin Yu-Hsi,Satani NikunjORCID,Ballato Elliot S.ORCID,Behr Eliot I.ORCID,deCarvalho Ana C.ORCID,Verhaak Roel G. W.,de Groot John,Huse Jason T.,Asara John M.,Kalluri RaghuORCID,Muller Florian L.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractHomozygous deletion of methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTAP) in cancers such as glioblastoma represents a potentially targetable vulnerability. Homozygous MTAP-deleted cell lines in culture show elevation of MTAP’s substrate metabolite, methylthioadenosine (MTA). High levels of MTA inhibit protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5), which sensitizes MTAP-deleted cells to PRMT5 and methionine adenosyltransferase 2A (MAT2A) inhibition. While this concept has been extensively corroborated in vitro, the clinical relevance relies on exhibiting significant MTA accumulation in human glioblastoma. In this work, using comprehensive metabolomic profiling, we show that MTA secreted by MTAP-deleted cells in vitro results in high levels of extracellular MTA. We further demonstrate that homozygous MTAP-deleted primary glioblastoma tumors do not significantly accumulate MTA in vivo due to metabolism of MTA by MTAP-expressing stroma. These findings highlight metabolic discrepancies between in vitro models and primary human tumors that must be considered when developing strategies for precision therapies targeting glioblastoma with homozygous MTAP deletion.

Funder

Andrew Sabin Family Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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