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Aldehyde dehydrogenase 3a2 protects AML cells from oxidative death and the synthetic lethality of ferroptosis inducers
Author(s) -
Rushdia Z. Yusuf,
Borja Sáez,
Azeem Sharda,
Nick van Gastel,
Vionnie W.C. Yu,
Ninib Baryawno,
Elizabeth W. Scadden,
Sanket S. Acharya,
Shrikanta Chattophadhyay,
Cherrie Huang,
Vasanthi S. Viswanathan,
Dana S'aulis,
Julien Cobert,
David B. Sykes,
Mark A. Keibler,
Sudeshna Das,
John N. Hutchinson,
Michael Churchill,
Siddhartha Mukherjee,
Dongjun Lee,
François Mercier,
John G. Doench,
Lars Bullinger,
David J. Logan,
Stuart L. Schreiber,
Gregory Stephanopoulos,
William B. Rizzo,
David T. Scadden
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2019001808
Subject(s) - inducer , lethality , apoptosis , synthetic lethality , oxidative phosphorylation , aldehyde dehydrogenase , cancer research , programmed cell death , chemistry , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , immunology , enzyme , biochemistry , toxicology , gene , dna repair
Metabolic alterations in cancer represent convergent effects of oncogenic mutations. We hypothesized that a metabolism-restricted genetic screen, comparing normal primary mouse hematopoietic cells and their malignant counterparts in an ex vivo system mimicking the bone marrow microenvironment, would define distinctive vulnerabilities in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Leukemic cells, but not their normal myeloid counterparts, depended on the aldehyde dehydrogenase 3a2 (Aldh3a2) enzyme that oxidizes long-chain aliphatic aldehydes to prevent cellular oxidative damage. Aldehydes are by-products of increased oxidative phosphorylation and nucleotide synthesis in cancer and are generated from lipid peroxides underlying the non–caspase-dependent form of cell death, ferroptosis. Leukemic cell dependence on Aldh3a2 was seen across multiple mouse and human myeloid leukemias. Aldh3a2 inhibition was synthetically lethal with glutathione peroxidase-4 (GPX4) inhibition; GPX4 inhibition is a known trigger of ferroptosis that by itself minimally affects AML cells. Inhibiting Aldh3a2 provides a therapeutic opportunity and a unique synthetic lethality to exploit the distinctive metabolic state of malignant cells.

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