Fatty Acid Metabolism Provides an Essential Survival Signal in OxPhos and BCR DLBCL Cells

Aurélie Montagne, Konstantina Kotta, Karoline Kielbassa-Elkadi, Isabelle Martins, José Ángel Martinez-Climent, Guido Kroemer, Catherine Thieblemont, Véronique Baud

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    Résumé

    Backgroung/objectives: Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most frequent subtype of malignant lymphoma and is a heterogeneous disease with various gene and chromosomal abnormalities. The development of novel therapeutic treatments has improved DLBCL prognosis, but patients with early relapse or refractory disease have a poor outcome (with a mortality of around 40%). Metabolic reprogramming is a hallmark of cancer cells. Fatty acid (FA) metabolism is frequently altered in cancer cells and recently emerged as a critical survival path for cancer cell survival. Methods: We first performed the metabolic characterization of an extended panel of DLBCL cell lines, including lipid droplet content. Then, we investigated the effect of drugs targeting FA metabolism on DLBCL cell survival. Further, we studied how the combination of drugs targeting FA and either mitochondrial metabolism or mTOR pathway impacts on DLBCL cell death. Results: Here, we reveal, using a large panel of DLBCL cell lines characterized by their metabolic status, that targeting of FA metabolism induces massive DLBCL cell death regardless of their OxPhos or BCR/glycolytic subtype. Further, FA drives resistance of DLBCL cell death induced by mitochondrial stress upon treatment with either metformin or L-asparaginase, two FDA-approved antimetabolic drugs. Interestingly, combining inhibition of FA metabolism with that of the mTOR oncogenic pathway strongly potentiates DLBCL cell death. Conclusion: Altogether, our data highlight the central role played by FA metabolism in DLBCL cell survival, independently of their metabolic subtype, and provide the framework for the use of drugs targeting this metabolic vulnerability to overcome resistance in DLBCL patients.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Numéro d'article707
    journalBiomedicines
    Volume13
    Numéro de publication3
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 mars 2025

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