AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how cancer cell energy metabolism, particularly NAD+ levels, influences the effectiveness of oncolytic viruses like reovirus in treating multiple myeloma.
  • - Researchers found that lower NAD+ levels, from inhibiting the enzyme NAMPT, made multiple myeloma cells more susceptible to reovirus-induced killing, especially in cells with active p53 and a preference for mitochondrial metabolism.
  • - The combination treatment of reovirus and NAD+ depletion led to significant mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death in specific myeloma cells, indicating that targeting NAD+ levels could enhance oncolytic virus therapies in multiple myeloma patients.

Article Abstract

Cancer cell energy metabolism plays an important role in dictating the efficacy of oncolysis by oncolytic viruses. To understand the role of multiple myeloma metabolism in reovirus oncolysis, we performed semi-targeted mass spectrometry-based metabolomics on 12 multiple myeloma cell lines and revealed a negative correlation between NAD+ levels and susceptibility to oncolysis. Likewise, a negative correlation was observed between the activity of the rate-limiting NAD+ synthesis enzyme NAMPT and oncolysis. Indeed, depletion of NAD+ levels by pharmacological inhibition of NAMPT using FK866 sensitized several myeloma cell lines to reovirus-induced killing. The myelomas that were most sensitive to this combination therapy expressed a functional p53 and had a metabolic and transcriptomic profile favoring mitochondrial metabolism over glycolysis, with the highest synergistic effect in KMS12 cells. Mechanistically, U-C-labeled glucose flux, extracellular flux analysis, multiplex proteomics, and cell death assays revealed that the reovirus + FK866 combination caused mitochondrial dysfunction and energy depletion, leading to enhanced autophagic cell death in KMS12 cells. Finally, the combination of reovirus and NAD+ depletion achieved greater antitumor effects in KMS12 tumors and patient-derived CD138+ multiple myeloma cells. These findings identify NAD+ depletion as a potential combinatorial strategy to enhance the efficacy of oncolytic virus-based therapies in multiple myeloma.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8904403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.omto.2022.02.017DOI Listing

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