Title (en)
The Lipid Metabolism as Target and Modulator of BOLD-100 Anticancer Activity: Crosstalk with Histone Acetylation
Language
English
Description (en)
The leading first-in-class ruthenium-complex BOLD-100 currently undergoes clinical phase-II anticancer evaluation. Recently, BOLD-100 is identified as anti-Warburg compound. The present study shows that also deregulated lipid metabolism parameters characterize acquired BOLD-100-resistant colon and pancreatic carcinoma cells. Acute BOLD-100 treatment reduces lipid droplet contents of BOLD-100-sensitive but not -resistant cells. Despite enhanced glycolysis fueling lipid accumulation, BOLD-100-resistant cells reveal diminished lactate secretion based on monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1) loss mediated by a frame-shift mutation in the MCT1 chaperone basigin. Glycolysis and lipid catabolism converge in the production of protein/histone acetylation substrate acetyl-coenzymeA (CoA). Mass spectrometric and nuclear magnetic resonance analyses uncover spontaneous cell-free BOLD-100-CoA adduct formation suggesting acetyl-CoA depletion as mechanism bridging BOLD-100-induced lipid metabolism alterations and histone acetylation-mediated gene expression deregulation. Indeed, BOLD-100 treatment decreases histone acetylation selectively in sensitive cells. Pharmacological targeting confirms histone de-acetylation as central mode-of-action of BOLD-100 and metabolic programs stabilizing histone acetylation as relevant Achilles' heel of acquired BOLD-100-resistant cell and xenograft models. Accordingly, histone gene expression changes also predict intrinsic BOLD-100 responsiveness. Summarizing, BOLD-100 is identified as epigenetically active substance acting via targeting several onco-metabolic pathways. Identification of the lipid metabolism as driver of acquired BOLD-100 resistance opens novel strategies to tackle therapy failure.
Keywords (en)
Fatty-Acid Synthase; Endoplasmic-Reticulum Stress; Regulated Protein 78; Cancer-Cells; Plasma-Membrane; Expression; Drug; Inhibition; Coa; Er
DOI
10.1002/advs.202301939
Author of the digital object
Dina Baier  (Medical University Vienna / University of Vienna)
Walter Berger  (Medical University Vienna)
Bernhard K. Keppler  (University of Vienna)
Gunda Koellensperger  (University of Vienna)
Samuel M. Meier-Menches  (University of Vienna / Medical University of Vienna)
Petra Heffeter  (Medical University Vienna)
Wolfgang M. Schmidt  (Medical University of Vienna)
Karin Nowikovsky  (University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna)
Noël J-M Raynal  (Université de Montréal)
Nicolas Sgarioto  (Université de Montréal)
Martin Schaier  (University of Vienna)
Benedict Regner  (Medical University Vienna)
Mate Rusz  (Medical University Vienna / University of Vienna)
Thomas Mohr  (Medical University Vienna / University of Vienna)
Christine Pirker  (Medical University Vienna)
Beatrix Schoenhacker-Alte  (Medical University Vienna / University of Vienna)
Theresa Mendrina  (Medical University Vienna / University of Vienna)
Format
application/pdf
Size
5.3 MB
Licence Selected
Type of publication
Article
Name of Publication (en)
Advanced Science
Pages or Volume
19
Volume
10
Number
32
Publisher
Wiley
Publication Date
2023