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Active TRAINING, INDIVIDUAL NIH (US)

Metabolic control of tRNA-mediated translational reprogramming in glioblastoma

$797.6K USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh
Country United States
Start Date Apr 01, 2024
End Date Mar 31, 2027
Duration 1,094 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10901318
Grant Description

ABSTRACT Glioblastoma (GBM) ranks among the most lethal of human cancers. Standard-of-care therapies offer only palliation and molecularly targeted treatments have shown little benefit for patients. The failure to achieve tumor control is partly due to the presence of GBM stem cells (GSCs). These stem-like cells self-renew and

differentiate into diverse cell types within the tumor, generating intratumoral heterogeneity and contribute to angiogenesis and immune escape. Although the impact of GSCs remains controversial, defining their molecular regulation may offer novel therapeutic paradigms to improve the clinical care of patients afflicted

with GBMs and other brain tumors. We and others have found that GSCs are distinguished from their differentiated progeny and normal neural stem cells at multiple levels of regulation, including transcription, epigenetic, epitranscriptomics, translational, and post-translational mechanisms. In preliminary studies, GSCs display enhanced protein synthesis relative

to differentiated progeny and neural stem cells, suggesting that efficient mRNA translation may contribute to tumorigenesis. During translation, tRNAs decipher genetic codes by base pairing with mRNA codons and transfer the corresponding amino acids to the growing peptide chain. Post-transcriptional tRNA modifications

regulate their translational functions, which are cell-type specific and influenced by environmental cues. Aberrant modifications alter tRNAs stability, structure, and folding to restrict or expand decoding. This proposal focuses on a currently understudied area of tRNA modification in GBMs. Comparing expression

profiles of disease-related tRNA-modifying enzymes, I identified differentially expressed tRNA-modifying enzymes and marks in patient-derived GBM surgical samples and cultures. As selected amino acids serve as co-factors for tRNA modifications, I hypothesize that dietary restriction of amino acids can reprogram the

tRNA landscape. Indeed, in preliminary studies genetic targeting of tRNA modification enzymes or amino acid restriction reduced GSC proliferation, self-renewal, and in vivo tumor growth. tRNA modifications can specifically target a subset of tRNAs, so I also hypothesize that altered tRNA modifications change

homeostasis of tRNA pools and lead to codon-biased reprogramming of translation that drive oncogenic processes in GBM. To test this hypothesis, I will use mass spectrometry to detect changes in tRNA modifications and ribosome profiling to understand downstream proteomic changes upon tRNA enzyme knockdown and diet restriction. Collectively, this proposal will provide molecular insights into roles of tRNA

modifications in cancer stem cell maintenance and inform development of novel therapies for GBM.

All Grantees

University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh

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