Abstract

Simple SummaryThe importance of autophagy in leukemia progression and survival has been studied previously. However, little is known about the development of resistance mechanisms to autophagy inhibition in leukemia. Here, we present data on the mechanisms by which leukemia cells maintain their cell survival after inhibition of autophagy by the loss of ATG3. After the loss of ATG3, leukemia cells upregulated their energy metabolism by increasing glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolism, in particular oxidative phosphorylation, which resulted in higher ATP levels. Moreover, inhibition of mitochondrial function strongly impaired cell survival in ATG3 deficiency, thus demonstrating the importance of ATG3 in the regulation of metabolism and survival of leukemic cells. Therefore, our data provide a rationale for combining autophagy inhibitors with inhibitors targeting mitochondrial metabolism for the development of leukemia therapy to overcome the potential obstacle of emerging resistance to autophagy inhibition.Autophagy is an important survival mechanism that allows recycling of nutrients and removal of damaged organelles and has been shown to contribute to the proliferation of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells. However, little is known about the mechanism by which autophagy- dependent AML cells can overcome dysfunctional autophagy. In our study we identified autophagy related protein 3 (ATG3) as a crucial autophagy gene for AML cell proliferation by conducting a CRISPR/Cas9 dropout screen with a library targeting around 200 autophagy-related genes. shRNA-mediated loss of ATG3 impaired autophagy function in AML cells and increased their mitochondrial activity and energy metabolism, as shown by elevated mitochondrial ROS generation and mitochondrial respiration. Using tracer-based NMR metabolomics analysis we further demonstrate that the loss of ATG3 resulted in an upregulation of glycolysis, lactate production, and oxidative phosphorylation. Additionally, loss of ATG3 strongly sensitized AML cells to the inhibition of mitochondrial metabolism. These findings highlight the metabolic vulnerabilities that AML cells acquire from autophagy inhibition and support further exploration of combination therapies targeting autophagy and mitochondrial metabolism in AML.

Highlights

  • Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) develops from malignant clonal expansion of undifferentiated myeloid progenitors, causing bone marrow failure

  • acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells are highly dependent on mitochondrial metabolism, as we and others have demonstrated the fundamental role of mitophagy in maintaining mitochondrial integrity in AML [7,8,9]

  • We identified autophagy related protein 3 (ATG3) as a key player for survival of leukemia cells and present conclusive evidence supporting that upon loss of ATG3 AML cells rewire their central carbon metabolism to evade survival disruption upon autophagy inhibition

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Summary

Introduction

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) develops from malignant clonal expansion of undifferentiated myeloid progenitors, causing bone marrow failure. There is an unmet medical need to find novel therapeutic approaches targeting AML onset and progression. Several studies have underlined the pivotal role of autophagy in the development and progression of AML [1,2]. Proliferating cancer cells are exposed to permanent nutrient deprivation and maintain high energy levels by rewiring metabolic pathways [5,6]. AML cells are highly dependent on mitochondrial metabolism, as we and others have demonstrated the fundamental role of mitophagy in maintaining mitochondrial integrity in AML [7,8,9]. Autophagy-related proteins (ATG) including ATG5 and ATG7, which are well known critical autophagy genes, have been reported to promote cell proliferation in leukemia [12,13]. The core autophagy gene ATG3, which directly participates in autophagosome formation by conjugating phosphatidyl-ethanolamine with LC3 [14,15,16], was shown to be essential for leukemogenesis [17]

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