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Glioblastoma and Methionine Addiction

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137156

Keywords

glioblastoma; methionine; metabolism; tumor microenvironment; epigenetics; therapeutic development

Funding

  1. NIH NCI [R01CA228085]
  2. John Sealy Distinguished Chair in Cancer Biology
  3. NSF [EFRI1933321]
  4. UTMB physician-scientist training program

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Glioblastoma is a deadly brain tumor with poor prognosis. Current research focuses on the dependence of glioblastoma on exogenous methionine as a potential therapeutic target. However, methionine depletion may have complex and potentially undesirable effects, requiring further study.
Glioblastoma is a fatal brain tumor with a bleak prognosis. The use of chemotherapy, primarily the alkylating agent temozolomide, coupled with radiation and surgical resection, has provided some benefit. Despite this multipronged approach, average patient survival rarely extends beyond 18 months. Challenges to glioblastoma treatment include the identification of functional pharmacologic targets as well as identifying drugs that can cross the blood-brain barrier. To address these challenges, current research efforts are examining metabolic differences between normal and tumor cells that could be targeted. Among the metabolic differences examined to date, the apparent addiction to exogenous methionine by glioblastoma tumors is a critical factor that is not well understood and may serve as an effective therapeutic target. Others have proposed this property could be exploited by methionine dietary restriction or other approaches to reduce methionine availability. However, methionine links the tumor microenvironment with cell metabolism, epigenetic regulation, and even mitosis. Therefore methionine depletion could result in complex and potentially undesirable responses, such as aneuploidy and the aberrant expression of genes that drive tumor progression. If methionine manipulation is to be a therapeutic strategy for glioblastoma patients, it is essential that we enhance our understanding of the role of methionine in the tumor microenvironment.

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