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Pharmacologic inhibition of fatty acid oxidation sensitizes human leukemia cells to apoptosis induction
Ismael Samudio, Romain Harmancey, Michael Fiegl, Hagop Kantarjian, Marina Konopleva, Borys Korchin, Kumar Kaluarachchi, William Bornmann, Seshagiri Duvvuri, Heinrich Taegtmeyer, Michael Andreeff
Ismael Samudio, Romain Harmancey, Michael Fiegl, Hagop Kantarjian, Marina Konopleva, Borys Korchin, Kumar Kaluarachchi, William Bornmann, Seshagiri Duvvuri, Heinrich Taegtmeyer, Michael Andreeff
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Research Article Hematology

Pharmacologic inhibition of fatty acid oxidation sensitizes human leukemia cells to apoptosis induction

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Abstract

The traditional view is that cancer cells predominately produce ATP by glycolysis, rather than by oxidation of energy-providing substrates. Mitochondrial uncoupling — the continuing reduction of oxygen without ATP synthesis — has recently been shown in leukemia cells to circumvent the ability of oxygen to inhibit glycolysis, and may promote the metabolic preference for glycolysis by shifting from pyruvate oxidation to fatty acid oxidation (FAO). Here we have demonstrated that pharmacologic inhibition of FAO with etomoxir or ranolazine inhibited proliferation and sensitized human leukemia cells — cultured alone or on bone marrow stromal cells — to apoptosis induction by ABT-737, a molecule that releases proapoptotic Bcl-2 proteins such as Bak from antiapoptotic family members. Likewise, treatment with the fatty acid synthase/lipolysis inhibitor orlistat also sensitized leukemia cells to ABT-737, which supports the notion that fatty acids promote cell survival. Mechanistically, we generated evidence suggesting that FAO regulates the activity of Bak-dependent mitochondrial permeability transition. Importantly, etomoxir decreased the number of quiescent leukemia progenitor cells in approximately 50% of primary human acute myeloid leukemia samples and, when combined with either ABT-737 or cytosine arabinoside, provided substantial therapeutic benefit in a murine model of leukemia. The results support the concept of FAO inhibitors as a therapeutic strategy in hematological malignancies.

Authors

Ismael Samudio, Romain Harmancey, Michael Fiegl, Hagop Kantarjian, Marina Konopleva, Borys Korchin, Kumar Kaluarachchi, William Bornmann, Seshagiri Duvvuri, Heinrich Taegtmeyer, Michael Andreeff

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Figure 7

EX enhances the therapeutic efficacy of Ara-C in a murine model of human AML.

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EX enhances the therapeutic efficacy of Ara-C in a murine model of human...
(A) At 2 weeks after i.v. injection of 2.5 × 106 GFP/luciferase-bearing MOLM13 cells, nude mice were randomized and treated with EX, Ara-C (100 mg/kg i.p. every other day), or EX plus Ara-C for 3 weeks, and survival was estimated by Kaplan and Meier analysis as described in Methods. (B) Noninvasive imaging of leukemia burden and progression. (C) At 2 weeks after the start of treatment (4 weeks after xenotransplantation), leukemia burden was quantitated noninvasively via bioluminescence (BL) as described in Methods.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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