Intercellular crosstalk shapes purinergic metabolism and signaling in cancer cells

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Julia Hesse - , University Hospital Duesseldorf (Author)
  • Bodo Steckel - , University Hospital Duesseldorf (Author)
  • Peter Dieterich - , Institute of Physiology (Author)
  • Siyar Aydin - , University Hospital Duesseldorf (Author)
  • Andreas Deussen - , Institute of Physiology (Author)
  • Jürgen Schrader - , University Hospital Duesseldorf (Author)

Abstract

CD73-derived adenosine suppresses anti-cancer immunity, and CD73 inhibitors are currently evaluated in several clinical trials. Here, we have assessed enzyme kinetics of all key purinergic ectoenzymes in five cancer cell lines (Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple myeloma, pancreas adenocarcinoma, urinary bladder carcinoma, and glioblastoma) under normoxia and hypoxia. We found that adenosine metabolism varied considerably between individual cancer types. All cell lines investigated exhibited high ecto-adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity, which critically influenced the kinetics of adenosine accumulation. Combining kinetics data with single-cell RNA sequencing data on myeloma and glioblastoma cancerous tissue revealed that purine metabolism is not homogeneously organized, but it differs in a cancer type-specific fashion between malignant cells, stromal cells, and immune cells. Since purine metabolism in cancerous tissue is most likely spatially heterogeneous and differs between the various cell types, diffusion distances in the microenvironment as well as ADA activity may be important variables that influence the level of bioactive adenosine.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number113643
Number of pages15
JournalCell reports
Volume43 (2024)
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jan 2024
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 38175748
ORCID /0000-0002-3564-0193/work/160478645

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • CP: Cancer, NAD, adenosine, adenosine deaminase, glioblastoma, hypoxia, multiple myeloma, Adenosine/metabolism, Signal Transduction, Humans, Glioblastoma, Tumor Microenvironment, 5'-Nucleotidase/metabolism, Adenosine Deaminase/metabolism, Adenosine Monophosphate/metabolism, Multiple Myeloma