News Releases

Oncogene mutation hijacks splicing process to promote growth and survival

May 31, 2013, San Diego, Calif.—An international team of researchers – led by principal investigator Paul S. Mischel, MD, a member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and professor in the Department of Pathology at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine – has found that a singular gene mutation helps brain cancer cells to not just survive, but grow tumors rapidly by altering the splicing of genes that control cellular metabolism.

The findings are published online in the journal Cell Metabolism.

Mischel, who heads the Ludwig Institute’s molecular pathology laboratory based at UC San Diego, and colleagues focused upon a process called alternative splicing, in which a single gene encodes for multiple proteins by including or excluding different, specific regions of DNA.

Alternative splicing is a tightly regulated and normal activity in healthy cells. For Mischel and colleagues in Los Angeles, Ohio and Japan, the question was whether mutations of a gene called EGFRvIII caused differential alternative splicing in glioblastoma multiformes (GBMs), the most common and aggressive type of malignant brain tumor. Median survival after GBM diagnosis is just 15 months with standard-of care radiation and chemotherapy. Without treatment, it is less than five months.

The scientists were particularly interested in whether the EGFRvIII mutation induced alternative splicing events that resulted in deregulation of normal cellular metabolism. “We focused on the ‘Warburg Effect,” a common metabolic derangement in cancer that enables tumor cells to metabolize glucose in a way that provides both a sufficient supply of energy and a source of building blocks that can be used for growth,” Mischel said.

They discovered a complex but compelling series of consequential events: The EGFRvIII mutation controls expression of a splicing factor called HNRNPA1, with initiates an alternatively spliced form of a regulatory protein called Max. The alternative form is called Delta Max.

Max is associated with MYC, a gene that drives tumor growth and the Warburg Effect in cancer. “Unlike the regular form of Max,” said Mischel, “Delta Max actually enhances c-MYC activity, specifically by promoting the glycolytic phenotype of the tumor cells.” In other words, the EGFRvIII mutation and subsequent alternative splicing commandeer the cell’s metabolic machinery in a way that lets it take up and use glucose to promote rapid tumor growth.

Mischel noted that the findings are specific to the EGFRvIII mutation and GBMs. It’s not known whether other oncogenes are able to exploit alternative splicing in similar fashion.

The findings, according to Mischel, provide two clear insights. First, they highlight the central role of EGFRvIII in GBM pathogenesis and its critical role in altering cellular metabolism in tumors. Second, they show that oncogenes can regulate cell metabolism through alternative splicing, which may provide a new set of targets for oncogene-specific drug development.

Co-authors are Ivan Babic, Kenta Masui and Beatrice Gini, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, UCSD; Erik S. Anderson, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA; Kazuhiro Tanaka, Department of Neurosurgery, Kobe University, Japan; Deliang Guo, Department of Radiation Oncology, Ohio State University Medical Center; Bing Li and Siavash K. Kurdistani Department of Biological Chemistry, UCLA; Shaojun Zhu, David Nathanson and Rui Li, Carolina Espindola Camacho and Heather R. Christofk, Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, UCLA; Yuchao Gu, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, UCSD and Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, UCLA; Genaro R. Villa, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, UCSD and Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, UCLA; David Akhavan, Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, UCLA; Sergey Mareninov, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UCLA; Ascia Eskin and Stanley F. Nelson, Department of Human genetics, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA; William H. Yong, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UCLA; Webster K. Cavenee, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, UCSD and UCSD Moores Cancer Center; Timothy F. Cloughesy, Department of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA; and Douglas L. Black, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA.

Funding for this research came, in part, from National Institutes of Health grants CA119347, NS73831, R01 GM084317 AND P01 CA95616, the Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation, Art of the Brain Fund, Accelerate brain Cancer Cure, the Fred Miller Family, the John W. Carson Foundation, the Ziering Family Foundation, the Henry Singleton Brain Cancer Fund and National Cancer Institute grant P30CA23100.

Posted with permission of the UCSD School of Medicine.

Notice
?

You are now leaving Ludwig Cancer Research's website and are going to a website that is not operated by the association. We are not responsible for the content or availability of linked sites. Do you wish to continue?

Continue
Cancel