Loss of MAT2A compromises methionine metabolism and represents a vulnerability in H3K27M mutant glioma by modulating the epigenome.
Brian J GolbournMatthew E HalbertKatharine HalliganSrinidhi VaradharajanBrian KrugNneka E MbahNisha KabirAnn-Catherine J StantonAbigail L LockeStephanie M CasilloYanhua ZhaoLauren M SandersAllison CheneySteven J MullettApeng ChenMichelle WassellAnthony AndrenJennifer PerezEsther P JaneDaniel R David PremkumarRobert F KoncarShideh MirhadiLauren H McCarlYue-Fang ChangYijen L WuTaylor A GatesmanAndrea F CruzMichal ZápotockýBaoli HuGary KohanbashXiuxing WangAlenoush VartanianMichael F MoranFrank LiebermanNduka M AmankulorStacy G WendellOlena M VaskeAshok PanigrahyJames FelkerKelsey C BertrandClaudia L KleinmanJeremy N RichRobert M FriedlanderAlberto BroniscerCostas Andreas LyssiotisNada JabadoIan F PollackStephen C MackSameer AgnihotriPublished in: Nature cancer (2022)
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) bearing driver mutations of histone 3 lysine 27 (H3K27M) are incurable brain tumors with unique epigenomes. Here, we generated a syngeneic H3K27M mouse model to study the amino acid metabolic dependencies of these tumors. H3K27M mutant cells were highly dependent on methionine. Interrogating the methionine cycle dependency through a short-interfering RNA screen identified the enzyme methionine adenosyltransferase 2A (MAT2A) as a critical vulnerability in these tumors. This vulnerability was not mediated through the canonical mechanism of MTAP deletion; instead, DMG cells have lower levels of MAT2A protein, which is mediated by negative feedback induced by the metabolite decarboxylated S-adenosyl methionine. Depletion of residual MAT2A induces global depletion of H3K36me3, a chromatin mark of transcriptional elongation perturbing oncogenic and developmental transcriptional programs. Moreover, methionine-restricted diets extended survival in multiple models of DMG in vivo. Collectively, our results suggest that MAT2A presents an exploitable therapeutic vulnerability in H3K27M gliomas.