AI Article Synopsis

  • Diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) are aggressive brain tumors in children, and imipridones ONC201 and ONC206 show promise as treatments despite limited effectiveness on their own.
  • A study reveals that GABA accumulation occurs quickly after ONC206 treatment, serving as an early metabolic biomarker for tracking drug effectiveness in mice models.
  • GABA not only helps protect tumor cells from stress-induced cell death but also presents a means for non-invasive monitoring and potential improvements in personalized treatment approaches for DMG patients.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) are lethal primary brain tumors in children. The imipridones ONC201 and ONC206 induce mitochondrial dysfunction and have emerged as promising therapies for DMG patients. However, efficacy as monotherapy is limited, identifying a need for strategies that enhance response. Another hurdle is the lack of biomarkers that report on drug-target engagement at an early timepoint after treatment onset. Here, using H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which is a non-invasive method of quantifying metabolite pool sizes, we show that accumulation of ψ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an early metabolic biomarker that can be detected within a week of ONC206 treatment, when anatomical alterations are absent, in mice bearing orthotopic xenografts. Mechanistically, imipridones activate the mitochondrial protease ClpP and upregulate the stress-responsive transcription factor ATF4. ATF4, in turn, upregulates glutamate decarboxylase, which synthesizes GABA, and downregulates , which degrades GABA, leading to GABA accumulation in DMG cells and tumors. Functionally, GABA secreted by imipridone-treated cells acts in an autocrine manner via the GABAB receptor to induce expression of superoxide dismutase (SOD1), which mitigates imipridone-induced oxidative stress and, thereby, curbs apoptosis. Importantly, blocking autocrine GABA signaling using the clinical stage GABAB receptor antagonist SGS-742 exacerbates oxidative stress and synergistically induces apoptosis in combination with imipridones in DMG cells and orthotopic tumor xenografts. Collectively, we identify GABA as a unique metabolic adaptation to imipridones that can be leveraged for non-invasive assessment of drug-target engagement and therapy. Clinical translation of our studies has the potential to enable precision metabolic therapy and imaging for DMG patients.

One Sentence Summary: Imipridones induce GABA accumulation in diffuse midline gliomas, an effect that can be leveraged for therapy and non-invasive imaging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11195108PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.06.07.597982DOI Listing

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