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Epstein-Barr-Virus-Driven Cardiolipin Synthesis Sustains Metabolic Remodeling During B-cell Lymphomagenesis.

Haixi YouLarissa HaveyZhixuan LiJohn AsaraRui Guo
Published in: Research square (2024)
Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) is associated with a range of B-cell malignancies, including Burkitt, Hodgkin, post-transplant, and AIDS-related lymphomas. Studies highlight EBV's transformative capability to induce oncometabolism in B-cells to support energy, biosynthetic precursors, and redox equivalents necessary for transition from quiescent to proliferation. Mitochondrial dysfunction presents an intrinsic barrier to EBV B-cell immortalization. Yet, how EBV maintains B-cell mitochondrial function and metabolic fluxes remains unclear. Here we show that EBV boosts cardiolipin(CL) biosynthesis, essential for mitochondrial cristae biogenesis, via EBNA2-induced CL enzyme transactivation. Pharmaceutical and CRISPR genetic analyses underscore the essentiality of CL biosynthesis in EBV-transformed B-cells. Metabolomic and isotopic tracing highlight CL's role in sustaining respiration, one-carbon metabolism, and aspartate synthesis, all vital for EBV-transformed B-cells. Targeting CL biosynthesis destabilizes mitochondrial one-carbon enzymes, causing synthetic lethality when coupled with a SHMT1/2 inhibitor. We demonstrate EBV-induced CL metabolism as a therapeutic target, offering new strategies against EBV-associated B-cell malignancies.
Keyphrases
  • epstein barr virus
  • diffuse large b cell lymphoma
  • oxidative stress
  • genome wide
  • high glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • signaling pathway
  • crispr cas
  • cancer therapy
  • genome editing
  • stress induced