Invited Speaker Oral 2nd Australian Cancer and Metabolism Meeting 2017

Mitochondrial mutations and metabolic adaptation in pancreatic cancer (#19)

Darren Saunders 1 , Rae-Anne Hardie 2 , Ellen Van Dam 2 , Mark Cowley 2 , Ting-Li Han 2 , Seher Balaban 2 , Marina Pajic 2 , Mark Pinese 2 , Mary Iconomou 2 , Robert F Shearer 2 , Jessie McKenna 2 , David Miller 2 , Nicola Waddell 2 , John V Pearson 2 , Sean M Grimmond 2 , Leonid Sazanov 1 , Andrew V Biankin 1 , Silas Villas-Boas 1 , Andrew J Hoy 1 , Nigel Turner 1
  1. UNSW, Sydney, NSW, Australia
  2. Australian Pancreatic Cancer Genome Initiative, Darlinghurst, NSW

Pancreatic cancer has a five-year survival rate of ~8%, with characteristic molecular heterogeneity and restricted treatment options. Targeting metabolism has emerged as a potentially effective therapeutic strategy for cancers such as pancreatic cancer, which are driven by genetic alterations that are not tractable drug targets. Although somatic mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) mutations have been observed in various tumors types, understanding of metabolic genotype-phenotype relationships is limited. We developed an integrated strategy to interrogate genotype-phenotype interactions combining genomics, metabolomics, and phenotypic analysis on a unique cohort of patient-derived pancreatic cancer cell lines (PDCLs).

We identified 24 somatic mutations in the mtDNA of 12 patient-derived pancreatic cancer cell lines (PDCLs). A further 18 mutations were identified in a targeted study of ~1000 nuclear genes important for mitochondrial function and metabolism. Comparison with reference datasets indicated a strong selection bias for non-synonymous mutants with predicted functional effects. Phenotypic analysis showed metabolic changes consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction, including reduced oxygen consumption and increased glycolysis. Metabolomics and radiolabeled substrate tracing indicated the initiation of reductive glutamine metabolism and lipid synthesis in tumours. Hence, the heterogeneous genomic landscape of pancreatic tumours may converge on a common metabolic phenotype, with individual tumours adapting to increased anabolic demands via different genetic mechanisms. Targeting resulting metabolic phenotypes may be a productive therapeutic strategy.