MAPK-mediated PHGDH induction is essential for melanoma formation and represents an actionable vulnerability.
Neel JasaniXiaonan XuBenjamin PosorskeYumi KimInmaculada Ibáñez de CáceresKenneth Y TsaiGina M DeNicolaFlorian A KarrethPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Overexpression of PHGDH, the rate-limiting enzyme in the serine synthesis pathway, promotes melanomagenesis, melanoma cell proliferation, and survival of metastases in serine-low environments such as the brain. While PHGDH amplification explains PHGDH overexpression in a subset of melanomas, we find that PHGDH levels are universally increased in melanoma cells due to oncogenic BRAF V600E promoting PHGDH transcription through mTORC1-mediated translation of ATF4. Importantly, PHGDH expression was critical for melanomagenesis as depletion of PHGDH in genetic mouse models blocked melanoma formation. Despite BRAF V600E - mediated upregulation, PHGDH was further induced by exogenous serine restriction. Surprisingly, BRAF V600E inhibition diminished serine restriction-mediated PHGDH expression by preventing ATF4 induction, creating a potential vulnerability whereby melanoma cells could be specifically starved of serine by combining BRAF V600E inhibition with exogenous serine restriction. Indeed, we show that this combination promoted cell death in vitro and attenuated melanoma growth in vivo. This study identified a melanoma cell-specific PHGDH-dependent vulnerability.
Keyphrases
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- poor prognosis
- cell death
- protein kinase
- climate change
- skin cancer
- mouse model
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- multiple sclerosis
- long non coding rna
- dna methylation
- basal cell carcinoma
- cell cycle
- white matter
- brain injury
- single cell
- mesenchymal stem cells
- wild type
- pi k akt
- resting state
- human health
- cell cycle arrest