Limited Environmental Serine and Glycine Confer Brain Metastasis Sensitivity to PHGDH Inhibition

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Bryan Ngo
  • Eugenie Kim
  • Victoria Osorio-Vasquez
  • Sophia Doll
  • Sophia Bustraan
  • Roger J Liang
  • Alba Luengo
  • Shawn M Davidson
  • Ahmed Ali
  • Gino B Ferraro
  • Grant M Fischer
  • Roozbeh Eskandari
  • Diane S Kang
  • Jing Ni
  • Ariana Plasger
  • Vinagolu K Rajasekhar
  • Edward R Kastenhuber
  • Sarah Bacha
  • Roshan K Sriram
  • Benjamin D Stein
  • Samuel F Bakhoum
  • Matija Snuderl
  • Paolo Cotzia
  • John H Healey
  • Nello Mainolfi
  • Vipin Suri
  • Adam Friedman
  • Mark Manfredi
  • David M Sabatini
  • Drew R Jones
  • Min Yu
  • Jean J Zhao
  • Rakesh K Jain
  • Kayvan R Keshari
  • Michael A Davies
  • Matthew G Vander Heiden
  • Eva Hernando
  • Lewis C Cantley
  • Michael E Pacold

A hallmark of metastasis is the adaptation of tumor cells to new environments. Metabolic constraints imposed by the serine and glycine-limited brain environment restrict metastatic tumor growth. How brain metastases overcome these growth-prohibitive conditions is poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH), which catalyzes the rate-limiting step of glucose-derived serine synthesis, is a major determinant of brain metastasis in multiple human cancer types and preclinical models. Enhanced serine synthesis proved important for nucleotide production and cell proliferation in highly aggressive brain metastatic cells. In vivo, genetic suppression and pharmacological inhibition of PHGDH attenuated brain metastasis, but not extracranial tumor growth, and improved overall survival in mice. These results reveal that extracellular amino acid availability determines serine synthesis pathway dependence, and suggests that PHGDH inhibitors may be useful in the treatment of brain metastasis.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCancer Discovery
Volume10
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)1352-1373
ISSN2159-8274
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Bibliographical note

Copyright ©2020, American Association for Cancer Research.

ID: 243473535