Alanine catabolism as a targetable vulnerability for MYC-driven liver cancer
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Liver cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death world-wide in part due to the shortage of effective therapies, and MYC overexpression defines an aggressive and especially difficult to treat subset of patients. Given MYC’s ability to reprogram cancer cell metabolism, and the liver’s role as a coordinator of systemic metabolism, we hypothesized that MYC induces metabolic dependencies that could be targeted to attenuate liver tumor growth. We discovered that MYC-driven liver cancers catabolize alanine in a GPT2-dependent manner to sustain their growth. GPT2 is the predominant alanine-catabolizing enzyme expressed in MYC-driven liver tumors and genetic ablation of GPT2 limited MYC-driven liver tumorigenesis. In vivo isotope tracing studies uncovered a role for alanine as a substrate for a repertoire of pathways including the tricarboxylic acid cycle, nucleotide production, and amino acid synthesis. Treating transgenic MYC-driven liver tumor mouse models with L-Cycloserine, a compound that inhibits GPT2, was sufficient to diminish the frequency of mouse tumor formation and attenuate growth of established human liver tumors. Thus, we identify a new targetable metabolic dependency that MYC-driven liver tumors usurp to ensure their survival.