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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Rewired Metabolism and Immunosuppression in MYCN-driven Neuroblastoma

$4.32M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Baylor College of Medicine
Country United States
Start Date Aug 15, 2024
End Date Jul 31, 2029
Duration 1,811 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10978992
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY Amplification of the oncogene MYCN drives high-risk progressive disease, resistance to therapy, and a poor overall survival rate below 45% for high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) patients. Further, more than half of all high-risk patients will relapse, and the post-relapse survival rate is only 10%. MYCN-driven NB tumors have poor immune

responses due to a relatively low mutational load, low MHC-I expression, and reduced immune cell infiltration. As a result, NB is often immunologically quiescent, thus limiting immunotherapy approaches. MYCN amplification has a central role in orchestrating the metabolic reprogramming that favors NB growth and adaptation to its

microenvironment. Tumor cells and immune cells exist in a complex environment where they share and compete for specific nutrients. Through unbiased transcriptomics, metabolomics, and immune profiling of TH-MYCN GEM and syngeneic mouse models of NB, we have identified cysteine metabolism as a selective vulnerability in

MYCN-driven NB. We have also found that MYCN drives an immune suppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) during oncogenesis, and reprograms NB tumors to create a cysteine-poor TME. By lacking de novo biosynthetic enzymes, T cells are exquisitely vulnerable to cysteine starvation, while cysteine supplementation

restores T-cell activation, expansion, and effector functions. Our central hypothesis is that MYCN-driven tumor intrinsic metabolism and recruitment of other cysteine-consuming cells (such as PMN-MDSCs) deplete extracellular cysteine, thus blocking T cell anti-tumor activity. This proposal aims to: (1) elucidate how oncogenic

MYCN rewires the metabolic environment of NB to drive immune suppression; and (2) modulate the metabolic environment of NB to enhance immune-based approaches for high-risk MYCN-amplified disease.

All Grantees

Baylor College of Medicine

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