Investigator

Heng Liu

The Wistar Institute

HLHeng Liu
Papers(3)
Targeting Fatty Acid …KDM5A Inhibits Antitu…Selective Alanine Tra…
Collaborators(10)
Wei ZhouRugang ZhangAndrew V. KossenkovJianhuang LinAaron R. GoldmanRonny DrapkinNan ZhangPhilip L. LorenziRafal J. ZielinskiRenyta Moses
Institutions(4)
The Wistar InstitutePennsylvania Departme…University of Pennsyl…City Of Hope National…

Papers

Targeting Fatty Acid Reprogramming Suppresses CARM1-expressing Ovarian Cancer

The arginine methyltransferase CARM1 exhibits high expression levels in several human cancers, with the trend also observed in ovarian cancer. However, therapeutic approaches targeting tumors that overexpress CARM1 have not been explored. Cancer cells exploit metabolic reprogramming such as fatty acids for their survival. Here we report that CARM1 promotes monounsaturated fatty acid synthesis and fatty acid reprogramming represents a metabolic vulnerability for CARM1-expressing ovarian cancer. CARM1 promotes the expression of genes encoding rate-limiting enzymes of de novo fatty acid metabolism such as acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 (ACC1) and fatty acid synthase (FASN). In addition, CARM1 upregulates stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1) that produces monounsaturated fatty acid by desaturation. Thus, CARM1 enhances de novo fatty acids synthesis which was subsequently utilized for synthesis of monounsaturated fatty acids. Consequently, inhibition of SCD1 suppresses the growth of ovarian cancer cells in a CARM1 status–dependent manner, which was rescued by the addition of monounsaturated fatty acids. Consistently, CARM1-expressing cells were more tolerant to the addition of saturated fatty acids. Indeed, SCD1 inhibition demonstrated efficacy against ovarian cancer in both orthotopic xenograft and syngeneic mouse models in a CARM1-dependent manner. In summary, our data show that CARM1 reprograms fatty acid metabolism and targeting SCD1 through pharmacological inhibition can serve as a potent therapeutic approach for CARM1-expressing ovarian cancers. Significance: CARM1 reprograms fatty acid metabolism transcriptionally to support ovarian cancer growth by producing monounsaturated fatty acids, supporting SCD1 inhibition as a rational strategy for treating CARM1-expressing ovarian cancer.

Selective Alanine Transporter Utilization Is a Therapeutic Vulnerability in ARID1A-Mutant Ovarian Cancer

Abstract Subunits of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex are altered in ∼20% of human cancers. Exemplifying the alterations is the ARID1A mutation that occurs in ∼50% of ovarian clear-cell carcinoma (OCCC), a disease with limited therapeutic options. In this study, we showed that ARID1A mutations create a dependence on alanine by regulating alanine transporters to increase intracellular alanine levels. ARID1A directly repressed the alanine importer SLC38A2 and simultaneously promoted the alanine exporter SLC7A8. ARID1A inactivation increased alanine utilization predominantly in protein synthesis and passively through the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Indeed, ARID1A-mutant OCCCs were hypersensitive to the inhibition of SLC38A2. In addition, SLC38A2 inhibition enhanced chimeric antigen receptor T-cell assault in vitro and synergized with immune checkpoint blockade using an anti–PD-L1 antibody in a genetically engineered mouse model of OCCC driven by conditional Arid1a inactivation in a CD8+ T-cell–dependent manner. These findings suggest that targeting alanine transport alone or in combination with immunotherapy may represent an effective therapeutic strategy for ARID1A-mutant cancers. Significance: ARID1A mutations regulate expression of alanine transporters to control alanine distribution between cancer cells and the associated tumor microenvironment, which may be exploited therapeutically alone or in combination with immunotherapy.

3Papers
35Collaborators