Author:
Yozgat Yasemin,Karakoc Emre,Sahin Ozgur,Cimen Seyma,Rabeh Wael M.,Aydin Mehmet Serif,Mardinoglu Adil,Gursel Ihsan,Cakir Asli,Sensoy Ozge,Ozdemir Ekrem M.,Bayrak Yusuf,Gunluoglu Mehmet Z.,Saatci Ozge,Jabbar Javaid,Ferreira Juliana C.,Aslan Melike Dinccelik,Yildirim Muzaffer,Mansoor Samman,Kerman Bilal E.,Aladag Zeynep,Kim Woonghee,Arif Muhammad,Vatandaslar Emre,Tok Olgu E.,Dogru Zeynep,Demir Aslı G. O.,Yildirim Tugce Canavar,Yozgat İhsan,Senturk Serif,Ozturk Gurkan,Cevher Murat Alper
Abstract
SUMMARYDeregulation of glycolysis is common in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Hexokinase (HK) enzymes catalyze the phosphoryl-group-transfer in glucose metabolism. There are a very few studies that have begun to reveal the connections between glucose metabolism and splicing programs. Unlike HK2 gene, which is expressed as a single transcript, there are several transcripts of the HK1 gene due to alternative splicing. However, the functional differential roles of HK1 isoforms in glucose metabolism and tumor progression are still elusive. Here, we show that primary NSCLC patient tumor cells metabolically differ from the normal lung epithelium where they display predominant expression of one of the HK1 transcripts, hexokinase1b (HK1b). We utilized CRISPR-Cas9 system to selectively target specific HK1b isoform in NSCLC and show that silencing HK1b in NSCLC cells inhibits tumorigenesis through diminishing glycolysis and proliferation. Our findings constitute the first demonstration of the first biochemical distinction between the HK1 splice variants. Finally, HK1b deletion sensitizes NSCLC cells to standard-of-care, cisplatin treatment, and the combination therapy synergistically increases both apoptotic cell death by cisplatin and autophagic cell death by increased formation of LC3-II associated autophagic vesicles and myelinoid bodies. Notably, loss of HK1b leads to cellular DNA damage, further combination with cisplatin therapy showed significantly increased levels of DNA damage. Importantly, we showed that glycolysis and cisplatin resistance can be restored by adding-back HK1b in HK1b knock-out cells. Our findings reveal that targeting HK1b isoform alone or in combination with cisplatin may represent a novel strategy for NSCLC patients.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory