Login / Signup

Glutaminase Activity of L-Asparaginase Contributes to Durable Preclinical Activity against Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

Wai-Kin ChanThomas D HorvathLin TanTodd LinkKarine G HarutyunyanMichael A PontikosAndriy AnishkinDi DuLeona A MartinEric YinSusan B RempeSergei SukharevMarina KonoplevaJohn N WeinsteinPhilip L Lorenzi
Published in: Molecular cancer therapeutics (2019)
We and others have reported that the anticancer activity of L-asparaginase (ASNase) against asparagine synthetase (ASNS)-positive cell types requires ASNase glutaminase activity, whereas anticancer activity against ASNS-negative cell types does not. Here, we attempted to disentangle the relationship between asparagine metabolism, glutamine metabolism, and downstream pathways that modulate cell viability by testing the hypothesis that ASNase anticancer activity is based on asparagine depletion rather than glutamine depletion per se. We tested ASNase wild-type (ASNaseWT) and its glutaminase-deficient Q59L mutant (ASNaseQ59L) and found that ASNase glutaminase activity contributed to durable anticancer activity against xenografts of the ASNS-negative Sup-B15 leukemia cell line in NOD/SCID gamma mice, whereas asparaginase activity alone yielded a mere growth delay. Our findings suggest that ASNase glutaminase activity is necessary for durable, single-agent anticancer activity in vivo, even against ASNS-negative cancer types.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • acute lymphoblastic leukemia
  • single cell
  • stem cells
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • type diabetes
  • acute myeloid leukemia
  • young adults
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation