TAMPA, Fla. — MYC proteins are important regulators of cancer cell growth, proliferation and metabolism through their ability to increase the expression of proteins involved in these processes. Deregulation of MYC proteins occurs in more than half of all cancers and is associated with poor patient prognosis and outcomes. Numerous researchers have devoted significant efforts to try to target MYC proteins as a therapeutic approach to treat cancer. However, this has been extremely challenging to date, and other complementary strategies are being investigated.
In a new article in Blood Cancer Discovery, which was published simultaneously with a presentation at the American Association for Cancer Research annual meeting 2023, a team of Moffitt Cancer Center researchers demonstrated a possible alternative approach. They showed that MYC activates a downstream pathway that chemically modifies a protein called eIF5A, and that inhibition of this modification process prevents lymphoma development and progression in mouse models.
"Our team hypothesized that rather than targeting MYC directly, it may be possible to inhibit its cancer effects by targeting a protein downstream of the MYC effector protein that is also critical to cancer development," said Shima Nakanishi, Ph.D., lead study author and research scientist in the Tumor Biology Department at Moffitt. "We focused our efforts on the polyamine biosynthesis pathway that is involved in cell growth and survival and that is hyper altered in many cancers."
The Moffitt team showed that MYC induces the expression of eIF5A and an enzyme called DHPS that modifies eIF5A with a unique amino acid called hypusine. The Moffitt researchers wanted to test if this chemical modification of eIF5A is important for the development and maintenance of lymphoma. They conducted laboratory experiments with cell lines and mouse models and determined that hypusine-modified eIF5A is critical to the development of lymphomas that are regulated by MYC. When the researchers blocked this modification genetically or chemically by targeting eIF5A or DHPS, lymphoma development and progression were inhibited. Mechanistically, they discovered that hypusine-modified eIF5A was important for the production of proteins responsible for cell growth and DNA replication. This is the first study to conclusively demonstrate that this modification is important to the development of cancer.
"As activation of the hypusine circuit is a hallmark of MYC-driven tumors, the development of improved small molecule inhibitors of DHPS, or of agents that bind to and block eIF5A-hypusine function, are attractive therapeutic strategies for translating these findings into the clinic," said study author John Cleveland, Ph.D., center director and chief scientific officer at Moffitt.
This study was supported by the National Cancer Institute (CA100603, CA241713, DK124906, DK060581 and P30 CA076292), Cortner-Couch Endowed Chair for Cancer Research from the University of South Florida School of Medicine, Diabetes Research Center (P30 DK020595) and funds from the state of Florida.
About Moffitt Cancer Center
Moffitt is dedicated to one lifesaving mission: to contribute to the prevention and cure of cancer. The Tampa-based facility is one of only 53 National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers