Abstract: Deregulated de novo lipid synthesis (DNLS) is a potential druggable vulnerability in Glioblastoma (GBM), a highly lethal and incurable cancer. Yet the molecular mechanisms that determine susceptibility to DNLS-targeted therapies remain unknown, and the lack of brain-penetrant inhibitors of DNLS has prevented their clinical evaluation as GBM therapeutics. Here, we report that YTX-7739, a clinical-stage inhibitor of stearoyl CoA desaturase (SCD), triggers lipotoxicity in patient-derived GBM stem-like cells (GSCs) and inhibits fatty acid desaturation in GSCs orthotopically implanted in mice. When administered as a single agent, or particularly in combination with Temozolomide (TMZ), YTX-7739 showed therapeutic efficacy in orthotopic GSC mouse models owing to its lipotoxicity and its ability to impair DNA damage repair. We report that aberrant MEK/ERK signaling and its repression of the energy sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) primarily drives therapeutic vulnerability to SCD and other DNLS inhibitors. Conversely, AMPK activation mitigates lipotoxicity and renders GSCs impervious to the loss of DNLS, both in culture and in vivo, by decreasing the saturation state of phospholipids and diverting toxic lipids into lipid droplets. Altogether, our findings reveal mechanisms of metabolic plasticity in GSCs and provide a framework for rational integration of DNLS-targeted therapies for the treatment of GBM.

Journal Link: 10.1101/2022.04.07.487530 Journal Link: Publisher Website Journal Link: Download PDF Journal Link: Google Scholar