Phosphatidylserine synthesis controls oncogenic B cell receptor signaling in B cell lymphoma

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Jumpei Omi, Taiga Kato, Yohei Yoshihama, Koki Sawada, Nozomu Kono, Junken Aoki

  • J Cell Biol
  • 7.8
  • 2024 Feb 5;223(2):e202212074.
  • Human
  • 流式
  • 免疫/内分泌
  • B细胞
  • 淋巴瘤
  • BLNK (pY84),CD19,PLC-γ2 (pY759)

Abstract

Cancer cells harness lipid metabolism to promote their own survival. We screened 47 cancer cell lines for survival dependency on phosphatidylserine (PS) synthesis using a PS synthase 1 (PTDSS1) inhibitor and found that B cell lymphoma is highly dependent on PS. Inhibition of PTDSS1 in B cell lymphoma cells caused a reduction of PS and phosphatidylethanolamine levels and an increase of phosphoinositide levels. The resulting imbalance of the membrane phospholipidome lowered the activation threshold for B cell receptor (BCR), a B cell-specific survival mechanism. BCR hyperactivation led to aberrant elevation of downstream Ca2+ signaling and subsequent apoptotic cell death. In a mouse xenograft model, PTDSS1 inhibition efficiently suppressed tumor growth and prolonged survival. Our findings suggest that PS synthesis may be a critical vulnerability of malignant B cell lymphomas that can be targeted pharmacologically.
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