FASN Inactivation-Induced Progranulin (GRN) Expression Promotes Lysosome-Dependent Cell Death to Suppress Leukemogenesis

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Abstract

Cancer cells rely on lipogenesis in addition to exogenous lipid uptake, and fatty acid synthase (FASN) is aberrantly overexpressed in myeloid leukemia. However, the precise role of FASN in leukemogenesisin vivoremains elusive. Here, we demonstrated that FASN is essential for leukemogenesis. Ablation of FASN impeded leukemic cell growth, survival, clonogenicityin vitro, and the leukemic burdenin vivo. Conditional knockout of FASN barely affected hematopoiesis but significantly attenuated the leukemic progression of MLL-AF9 transplants. By screening a library of platensimycin derivatives, we identified compound MS-C19 as a potent FASN inhibitor. Pharmacological targeting of FASN by MS-C19 suppressed leukemic cell growth and clonogenicity in clinical AML blasts. Mechanistically, both MS-C19 treatment and FASN deficiency triggered the activation of lysosomal and inflammatory gene expression. Loss of FASN led to lysosomal membrane permeabilization and subsequent lysosome-associated cell death, but not lysosome biogenesis. We further identified thatGRN, a lysosomal and neuroinflammatory gene, was potently transcribed by TFEB upon FASN loss. Depletion ofGRNsignificantly reversed the inhibitory effects caused by FASN knockdown. Our work demonstrates that FASN is a therapeutic target for myeloid leukemia, and inactivation of FASN by the lead compound MS-C19 provides an alternative approach for leukemic intervention.

Key Points

  • Genetic ablation of FASN induces apoptosis, impedes leukemia cell growth, and improves the survival of leukemic xenografts.

  • Targeting FASN by the compound MS-C19, a derivative of the natural microbe antibiotic platensimycin, reduces the cell survival of leukemic cell lines, the clinical leukemic blasts, and MLL-AF9 transformed murine leukemic cells.

  • FASN inhibition induces lysosome-dependent cell death that relies on Progranulin (GRN) expression.

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