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SULT1A1-dependent sulfonation of alkylators is a lineage-dependent vulnerability of liver cancers.

Lei ShiWilliam ShenMindy I DavisKe KongPhuong VuSupriya K SahaRamzi AdilJohannes KreuzerRegina EganTobie D LeePatricia GreningerJonathan H ShrimpWei ZhaoTing-Yu WeiMi ZhouJason EcclestonJonathan SussmanUjjawal ManochaVajira WeerasekaraHiroshi KondoVindhya VijayMeng-Ju WuSara E KearneyJeffrey HoJoseph McClanaghanEllen MurchieGiovanna S CrowtherSamarjit PatnaikMatthew B BoxerMin ShenDavid Tsai TingWilliam Y KimBen Z StangerVikram DeshpandeCristina R FerroneCyril H BenesWilhelm HaasMatthew D HallNabeel El-Bardeesy
Published in: Nature cancer (2023)
Adult liver malignancies, including intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma, are the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Most individuals are treated with either combination chemotherapy or immunotherapy, respectively, without specific biomarkers for selection. Here using high-throughput screens, proteomics and in vitro resistance models, we identify the small molecule YC-1 as selectively active against a defined subset of cell lines derived from both liver cancer types. We demonstrate that selectivity is determined by expression of the liver-resident cytosolic sulfotransferase enzyme SULT1A1, which sulfonates YC-1. Sulfonation stimulates covalent binding of YC-1 to lysine residues in protein targets, enriching for RNA-binding factors. Computational analysis defined a wider group of structurally related SULT1A1-activated small molecules with distinct target profiles, which together constitute an untapped small-molecule class. These studies provide a foundation for preclinical development of these agents and point to the broader potential of exploiting SULT1A1 activity for selective targeting strategies.
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