AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how some cancers lack the enzyme ASS1, which is crucial for making arginine, leading to reliance on treatments that degrade extracellular arginine, like ADI-PEG20.
  • Researchers found that removing ASS1 (Ass1 KO) in a mouse model did not impact tumor growth or initiation, challenging the idea that silencing ASS1 gives tumors a growth advantage under arginine deprivation.
  • The findings suggest that resistance to ADI-PEG20 is influenced by the tumor microenvironment, which can support tumor growth through processes like macropinocytosis and autophagy; targeting these pathways with existing drugs could enhance treatment outcomes for patients.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Many cancers lack argininosuccinate synthetase 1 (ASS1), the rate-limiting enzyme of arginine biosynthesis. This deficiency causes arginine auxotrophy, targetable by extracellular arginine-degrading enzymes such as ADI-PEG20. Long-term tumor resistance has thus far been attributed solely to ASS1 reexpression. This study examines the role of ASS1 silencing on tumor growth and initiation and identifies a noncanonical mechanism of resistance, aiming to improve clinical responses to ADI-PEG20.

Experimental Design: Tumor initiation and growth rates were measured for a spontaneous Ass1 knockout (KO) murine sarcoma model. Tumor cell lines were generated, and resistance to arginine deprivation therapy was studied in vitro and in vivo.

Results: Conditional Ass1 KO affected neither tumor initiation nor growth rates in a sarcoma model, contradicting the prevalent idea that ASS1 silencing confers a proliferative advantage. Ass1 KO cells grew robustly through arginine starvation in vivo, while ADI-PEG20 remained completely lethal in vitro, evidence that pointed toward a novel mechanism of resistance mediated by the microenvironment. Coculture with Ass1-competent fibroblasts rescued growth through macropinocytosis of vesicles and/or cell fragments, followed by recycling of protein-bound arginine through autophagy/lysosomal degradation. Inhibition of either macropinocytosis or autophagy/lysosomal degradation abrogated this growth support effect in vitro and in vivo.

Conclusions: Noncanonical, ASS1-independent tumor resistance to ADI-PEG20 is driven by the microenvironment. This mechanism can be targeted by either the macropinocytosis inhibitor imipramine or the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine. These safe, widely available drugs should be added to current clinical trials to overcome microenvironmental arginine support of tumors and improve patient outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10425734PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-22-2642DOI Listing

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