Abstract
Background:
Uterine leiomyomas can be classified into molecularly distinct subtypes according to their genetic triggers: MED12 mutations, HMGA2 upregulation, or inactivation of FH. The aim of this study was to identify metabolites and metabolic pathways that are dysregulated in different subtypes of leiomyomas.
Methods:
We performed global metabolomic profiling of 25 uterine leiomyomas and 17 corresponding myometrium specimens using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectroscopy.
Results:
A total of 641 metabolites were detected. All leiomyomas displayed reduced homocarnosine and haeme metabolite levels. We identified a clearly distinct metabolomic profile for leiomyomas of the FH subtype, characterised by metabolic alterations in the tricarboxylic acid cycle and pentose phosphate pathways, and increased levels of multiple lipids and amino acids. Several metabolites were uniquely elevated in leiomyomas of the FH subtype, including N6-succinyladenosine and argininosuccinate, serving as potential biomarkers for FH deficiency. In contrast, leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype displayed reduced levels of vitamin A, multiple membrane lipids and amino acids, and dysregulation of vitamin C metabolism, a finding which was also compatible with gene expression data.
Conclusions:
The study reveals the metabolomic heterogeneity of leiomyomas and provides the requisite framework for strategies designed to target metabolic alterations promoting the growth of these prevalent tumours.
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Main
Uterine leiomyomas are benign, yet extremely common tumours affecting up to 70% of women by age 50 years (Baird et al, 2003). Although the majority are asymptomatic, approximately 25% of affected women display symptoms including abnormal uterine bleeding and abdominal pain that require medical attention (Stovall, 2001). As conservative therapies leave room for improvement, patients frequently end up undergoing hysterectomy. Consequently, the economic and health impact of leiomyomas is enormous: the estimated annual health-care-related costs of uterine leiomyomas range from 6 to 34 billion USD in the United States (Cardozo et al, 2012).
Leiomyomas are oestrogen- and progesterone-dependent tumours that consist of slowly proliferating smooth muscle cells surrounded by abundant extracellular matrix (Malik et al, 2010). An affected uterus may contain multiple leiomyomas that vary greatly in size and may exceed 20 cm in diameter (Cramer and Patel, 1990). Molecular analyses have revealed that leiomyomas harbour mutually exclusive driver mutations (Markowski et al, 2012; Mehine et al, 2014; Kämpjärvi et al, 2016). The most frequent of these are mediator complex subunit 12 (MED12) mutations (Mäkinen et al, 2011) and high mobility group AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) translocations (Schoenmakers et al, 1995), which affect approximately 80% and 10% of uterine leiomyomas, respectively (Mehine et al, 2014). Heterozygous germline mutations in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzyme fumarate hydratase (FH) cause hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) syndrome, characterised by predisposition to type 2 papillary renal cell carcinoma, as well as uterine and cutaneous leiomyomas (Tomlinson et al, 2002). These syndromic tumours display a somatic second-hit mutation in FH, resulting in the complete loss of FH activity in neoplastic cells. Biallelic inactivation of FH accounts for only 1% of sporadic leiomyomas (Lehtonen et al, 2004). Different downstream mechanisms are likely to lead to the development of leiomyomas, as these three genetic-driver changes result in clearly distinct gene expression profiles (Mehine et al, 2016).
Reprogramming of metabolic pathways is a hallmark feature of neoplastic growth and therapeutic targeting of metabolic alterations is a promising strategy to control the process (Tennant et al, 2010; Pavlova and Thompson, 2016). To our knowledge, no prior studies exploring the whole metabolome of leiomyomas exist. Here we used untargeted metabolomic analysis to determine the pathophysiology of leiomyomas and the metabolic processes that enable tumour growth and development. This study explored the global metabolomic profile of 25 leiomyomas, harbouring different genetic-driver alterations including defects in FH, MED12, or HMGA2, and 17 respective normal myometrium samples. Furthermore, we integrated metabolomic and gene expression data to gain a deeper understanding of the molecular networks that are dysregulated in leiomyomas. We identified several metabolic alterations common for all leiomyomas and distinctive characteristics for leiomyomas of the FH and MED12 subtypes.
Materials and methods
Subjects
The study material was derived from sample collections described in our previous work (Mäkinen et al, 2011; Heinonen et al, 2014; 2017; Mehine et al, 2016). Briefly, uterine leiomyoma and corresponding myometrial tissue samples were collected from patients undergoing hysterectomy in Finland between 2002 and 2015 and stored fresh frozen at −80 °C. Samples from five patients (series M) were obtained anonymously with the approval of the director of the health-care unit. The other patients (series B, My, and N) signed an informed consent, and clinical data were available from their patient records. The appropriate Ethics Review Board of Helsinki University Hospital, Finland approved this study.
Sample selection
The study samples were selected based on our previous work: seven leiomyomas were FH deficient (three from HLRCC patients), seven harboured a mutation in MED12, two displayed HMGA2 overexpression, and nine were mutation negative for all three, henceforth termed triple wild-type leiomyomas. These 25 leiomyomas were obtained from 17 patients from whom normal myometrium samples were also included in the study.
All samples were screened for MED12 hotspot mutations using Sanger sequencing (Kämpjärvi et al, 2016). Deletions and rearrangements affecting FH or HMGA2 loci were detected using whole-genome sequencing and/or SNP arrays (Supplementary Table S1) (Mehine et al, 2016). All tumours with 1q deletion and corresponding normal samples were screened for FH mutations using Sanger sequencing (Supplementary Table S1) (Kämpjärvi et al, 2016). The relative quantification of HMGA2 expression was determined in all samples with rearrangements or deletions affecting HMGA2 using gene expression data (Mehine et al, 2016) or HMGA2 qPCR, performed on a 7500 Fast Real-Time PCR System with Assay No. Hs04397751_m1 (Applied Biosystems, Darmstadt, Germany), using 18S rRNA as endogenous control (Supplementary Table S1).
Gene expression profiling
A total of 94 leiomyomas, including 10 with biallelic loss of FH, 34 with a MED12 mutation, 27 with an HMGA2 rearrangement and 23 triple wild-type leiomyomas, and 60 corresponding myometrium samples were assayed with Affymetrix GeneChip Human Exon 1.0 ST arrays. The gene expression profiling is described in detail in Mehine et al (2016).
Metabolomic profiling
Metabolomic profiling was performed by Metabolon Inc. (Durham, NC, USA) as described previously (Mesnage et al, 2016). Briefly, samples were analysed using four independent platforms: two reverse phase/ultra-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectroscopy (RP/UPLC-MS/MS) methods with positive ion mode electrospray ionisation (ESI) chromatographically optimised separately for hydrophilic and hydrophobic compounds, one for analysis by RP/UPLC-MS/MS with negative ion mode ESI, and one for analysis by hydrophilic interaction chromatography/UPLC-MS/MS with negative ion mode ESI. All methods used an ACQUITY UPLC (Waters, Milford, MA, USA) and a Q-Exactive high-resolution/accurate mass spectrometer (Thermo Scientific Inc., Waltham, MA, USA) interfaced with a heated electrospray ionisation (HESI-II) source and Orbitrap mass analyser operated at 35 000 mass resolution. A pooled matrix sample of each experimental sample served as a technical replicate; extracted water samples served as process blanks; and a cocktail of quality-control standards spiked into every analysed sample allowed instrument performance monitoring and aided chromatographic alignment. Compounds were identified by comparison to library entries of purified standards or recurrent unknown entities. Peaks were quantified using area under the curve.
To replicate the clustering results, a targeted analysis of 102 metabolites on 10 normal myometrium samples of uterine leiomyoma patients was carried out at the Metabolomics Unit, Technology Centre, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland FIMM, University of Helsinki as previously described (Nikkanen et al, 2016).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed with Partek Genomics Suite version 6.6 (Partek Inc., St Louis, MO, USA). Raw data of each metabolite were rescaled to set the median to 1 and log2 transformed. Missing values were imputed with the minimum observed value for each compound. Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed for all samples. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering analysis (cosine dissimilarity) was performed using all metabolites. The PCA and the unsupervised hierarchical clustering analysis revealed five outlier samples (M4 m2, M4 m3, M4 N, M11 m2, and M11 N), all of which were derived from two individual patients (M4 and M11). Both normal samples were also outliers in the replication data set (Supplementary Figure S1). These outlier samples were interpreted as biological outliers and therefore included in the subsequent analyses.
To evaluate whether tumour size (largest diameter) correlated with any of the metabolite levels, we calculated Pearson’s correlation coefficients. A two-way ANOVA, with tissue type and patient-of-origin as factors, was constructed to identify metabolites that were dysregulated between leiomyomas and the corresponding myometrium samples. A one-way ANOVA, with tissue type as a factor, was constructed to identify metabolites that were dysregulated in each leiomyoma subtype (FH, MED12, HMGA2, and triple wild type) as compared with all myometrium samples. The 20 most significant metabolites from each comparison, yielding 63 unique metabolites, were used for supervised hierarchical clustering analysis (cosine dissimilarity) of all tumour and normal samples. To identify the most uniquely dysregulated metabolites for leiomyomas of MED12 and FH subtypes, two three-way ANOVA tests, with mutation status (mutation positive or negative), tissue type, and patient-of-origin as factors, were constructed that compared each subtype against the rest of the leiomyoma and myometrium samples. To identify dysregulated main categories of metabolites between each leiomyoma subtype (FH, MED12, HMGA2, and triple wild type) and all myometrium samples, we used the Partek GO-ANOVA function (metabolite set ANOVA) with metabolites grouped into nine main categories. To explore whether any of the 86 metabolic pathways were significantly dysregulated, a pathway enrichment analysis was performed with the significant metabolites (q-value <0.1) for each leiomyoma subtype. False discovery rate control was used to correct for multiple testing (Benjamini and Hochberg, 1995).
Ingenuity pathway analysis
Ingenuity pathway analysis (IPA) was carried out with each set of significantly dysregulated metabolites (q-value <0.1) and each set of significantly differentially expressed genes (q-value <0.1, |fold change (FC)|>1.5) using IPA software version 33559992 (Qiagen, Redwood City, CA, USA). We used IPA’s comparison tool to identify pathways that were significantly dysregulated in both the metabolomic and gene expression data (P-value <0.05 in both) for leiomyomas of the FH, MED12, and HMGA2 subtypes. We excluded the triple wild-type leiomyomas from the analyses due to their heterogeneity in the clustering analyses. Ingenuity Knowledge Base (Genes+Endogenous Chemicals) was used as a reference set.
Results
LC-MS/MS identified 588 named and 53 unnamed metabolites among the 25 leiomyoma and 17 myometrium samples (Figure 1). Genetic-driver changes had stronger effect on global metabolomic profiles than menopause status or hormone treatment of the patients (Supplementary Figure S2A). Leiomyomas of the FH subtype displayed a clearly distinct metabolomic profile according to the PCA (Figure 1) and the hierarchical clustering analysis (Supplementary Figure S2A). Leiomyomas of the FH, MED12, and HMGA2 subtypes were distinguishable from each other and from the myometrium based on abundancies of metabolites belonging to multiple different categories (Figure 2). The metabolites that most significantly correlated with tumour size were tryptophan betaine (r=0.65, 95% confidence interval 0.35 to 0.83, q-value=0.082) and glucose (r=−0.64, 95% confidence interval −0.83 to −0.33, q-value=0.089, Supplementary Table S2).
To identify dysregulated metabolites in the complete set of leiomyomas, we compared all 25 leiomyomas against the corresponding 17 myometrial tissue specimens. Although patient-of-origin was a major source of variation across all metabolites (Supplementary Figure S2B), 70 metabolites were significantly dysregulated between leiomyoma and myometrium samples across all patients (q-value <0.1, Supplementary Table S3). The most significant metabolite was homocarnosine (FC −14.7), downregulated in all leiomyomas regardless of subtype (Figure 3). To identify dysregulated metabolites in leiomyomas of the FH, MED12, HMGA2, and triple wild-type subtypes, we compared leiomyomas of each subtype against all myometrial tissue specimens. This revealed 170, 104, 35, and 22 significant metabolites, respectively (q-value <0.1, Supplementary Table S3). Most of the significantly dysregulated metabolites were increased in leiomyomas of the FH (118/170; 69%) and HMGA2 (21/35; 60%) subtypes, whereas in the MED12 (15/104; 14%) and triple wild-type subtypes (4/22, 18%) only a small proportion of the significantly aberrant metabolite levels showed increase (Figures 1C and D and 2). Owing to the limited number of HMGA2-overexpressing leiomyomas, we describe only changes supported by both metabolic and expression data in this subtype or detectable in multiple subtypes.
Many cofactors and vitamins were altered in all leiomyomas or in specific subtypes. Haeme and biliverdin, which link to haemoglobin and porphyrin metabolism, were reduced in all leiomyoma subtypes (Supplementary Figure S3, Supplementary Table S3). Ascorbate (vitamin C) and aldarate metabolism was altered in leiomyomas of the MED12 and triple wild-type subtypes (Table 1); the level of ascorbate itself remained unaltered, but the levels of dehydroascorbate, threonate, and gulonate were reduced. IPA predicted dysregulation of the antioxidant action of vitamin C pathway in leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype based on both metabolic and gene expression data (Table 2). Similarly, retinol (vitamin A) was significantly reduced in the MED12 and triple wild-type subtypes (FC −2.5 and −1.8, respectively). Based on previous studies, vitamin D deficiency contributes to the development of leiomyomas (Brakta et al, 2015); no vitamin D metabolites were detected in our study samples.
The alterations affecting amino-acid metabolites varied between leiomyoma subtypes. FH-deficient leiomyomas displayed significant accumulation of urea cycle metabolites argininosuccinate (FC 38.5, Figure 3), proline (FC 1.5, Supplementary Figure S3), citrulline (FC 1.4), dimethylarginine (FC 2.5), trans-4-hydroxyproline (FC 1.7), and N-monomethylarginine (FC 1.6). The levels of leucine, isoleucine, and valine metabolites 3-methyl-2-oxobutyrate (FC 8.3), 4-methyl-2-oxopentanoate (FC 6.5), and 3-methyl-2-oxovalerate (FC 4.7) were notably elevated in leiomyomas of the FH subtype. Leiomyomas of the HMGA2 subtype displayed accretion of the polyamine metabolites N-acetylputrescine (FC 11.3) and N(4)-acetylspermidine (FC 7.7), the latter of which was also elevated in the FH subtype (FC 5.2). Furthermore, IPA predicted dysregulation of putrescine degradation III in the HMGA2 subtype based on both metabolomic and gene expression data (Table 2). In leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype, the pathway enrichment analysis of the metabolomic data revealed significant dysregulation of methionine, cysteine, S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), and taurine metabolism as well as significant reduction of dipeptides (Table 1). In addition, multiple amino acids and their derivatives were specifically decreased in the MED12 subtype, including histamine (FC −35.9, Figure 3), phenylalanine (FC −2.2, Figure 3), leucine (FC −1.5, Supplementary Figure S3), isoleucine (FC −1.5), lysine (FC −1.5), arginine (FC −1.4), argininosuccinate (FC −1.9, Figure 3), tyrosine (FC −2.0), and tryptophan (FC −1.5).
Leiomyomas displayed alterations in a wide array of lipid classes. The pathway enrichment analysis revealed significant dysregulation of sphingolipid metabolism in all subtypes except triple wild-type leiomyomas (Table 1). Especially leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype showed considerable enrichment of sphingolipid alterations characterised by significant reduction of 23 out of 38 (60.5%) detected sphingolipids. In addition, IPA predicted dysregulation of sphingosine 1-phosphate signalling in the HMGA2 subtype at both the metabolic and transcriptional levels (Table 2). Phosphatidylserines were reduced especially in leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype (Table 1). Plasmalogens, diacylglycerols, and monohydroxy fatty acids were primarily elevated in both the FH and HMGA2 subtypes (Table 1, Supplementary Table S3).
As expected, several components of the TCA cycle were significantly elevated in leiomyomas of the FH subtype, including fumarate (FC 12.0, Figure 3), malate (FC 10.5, Supplementary Figure S3), alpha-ketoglutarate (αKG, FC 5.1), succinate (FC 4.1), and 2-methylcitrate/homocitrate (FC 2.0). The pathway enrichment analysis confirmed significant dysregulation of TCA cycle metabolism (Table 1). Both metabolomic and gene expression data suggested an increased flux through the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP): activation was supported by upregulation of PPP enzymes, such as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (FC 3.7), phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (FC 3.0), and transketolase (FC 4.3), and depletion of key metabolites (Tables 1 and 2).
To identify the most uniquely dysregulated metabolites as potential biomarkers for leiomyomas of the FH and MED12 subtypes, we compared leiomyomas of these subtypes against all the other tumour and normal samples (Supplementary Table S4). We detected 240 and 75 subtype-specific metabolites (q-value <0.1) in leiomyomas of the FH and MED12 subtypes, respectively. Figure 3 illustrates the levels of the most uniquely dysregulated metabolites for both subtypes. To identify dysregulated main categories of metabolites, we performed metabolite set ANOVA. The FH subtype displayed a significant overall increase of energy, lipid, and nucleotide metabolites, whereas the MED12 subtype displayed a significant overall decrease of cofactors and vitamins, peptides, and unnamed metabolites, and the triple wild-type leiomyomas displayed significant reduction of cofactors and vitamins (Supplementary Figure S4).
Discussion
This study explored the global metabolomic profiles of 25 uterine leiomyomas representing the three main molecular subtypes: leiomyomas driven by FH deficiency, a MED12 mutation, or HMGA2 upregulation. Altogether 70 metabolites were commonly dysregulated in all leiomyomas. We found that FH-deficient leiomyomas represent, as expected, a metabolically distinct subtype of leiomyomas and that these leiomyomas can be distinguished based on their metabolomic profile, whereas the metabolic changes in the other subtypes were subtler. Leiomyomas of the FH subtype displayed predominantly accumulation of metabolites, whereas the changes in the MED12 subtype were mainly decreases. It is intriguing to speculate that the overall reduction of metabolites may limit the supply of building blocks and thereby explain the significantly smaller size of leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype (Heinonen et al, 2017).
Leiomyomas of all subtypes displayed reduction of specific vitamin and other cofactor metabolites, suggesting alterations in redox state, enzyme function, and signalling pathways. We detected a significant reduction of retinoic acid (RA) precursor retinol (vitamin A) in leiomyomas of the MED12 and triple wild-type subtypes. Furthermore, gene expression data revealed RA receptor activation as one of the most significantly dysregulated pathways in leiomyomas (Mehine et al, 2016). Reduced retinol levels may reflect a decreased concentration of biologically active RA and increased rate of RA metabolism, which has been previously observed in leiomyomas (Catherino and Malik, 2007). Furthermore, all-trans-RA, synthetic retinoid N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)retinamide (4-HPR), and RA metabolism-blocking agent liarozole have been shown to reduce leiomyoma cell proliferation and extracellular matrix production (Broaddus et al, 2004; Malik et al, 2008; Gilden et al, 2012). Essentially, 4-HPR and liarozole have been well tolerated in clinical studies (Debruyne et al, 1998; Camerini et al, 2001). The metabolites of ascorbate (vitamin C) were also depleted, and based on the gene expression data, the antioxidant action of vitamin C was predicted to be activated in leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype. In addition to antioxidant response, these alterations in vitamin C metabolites may reflect adaptations in other important cellular processes including DNA and histone demethylation, and the nuclear factor-κB-mediated signalling (Cárcamo et al, 2004; Young et al, 2015). In particular, the depletion of vitamin C metabolites may link to the abundance of extracellular matrix in leiomyomas, as vitamin C is a cofactor in collagen synthesis (Du et al, 2012). Epidemiological studies have found no association between vitamin C and leiomyoma risk, whereas results regarding retinol levels and leiomyoma risk are contradictory (Martin et al, 2011; Wise et al, 2011), thus further research on their use as preventive agents is warranted.
As a novel finding, the levels of haeme, a fundamental co-factor in cellular respiration and signal transduction, and its degradation product biliverdin were reduced in all leiomyomas, suggesting that haeme metabolism has an important role in leiomyomagenesis. As the cataplerotic haeme biosynthesis uses TCA-cycle-derived carbon and haeme degradation produces bilirubin to be excreted, increased haeme metabolism promotes removal of accumulated TCA cycle metabolites especially in FH-deficient leiomyomas, in which the expression of haeme-degrading-enzyme gene, haeme oxygenase 1 (HMOX1) is upregulated (Frezza et al, 2011; Mehine et al, 2016). Moreover, the inhibition of haeme biosynthesis and degradation pathway has demonstrated to be synthetic lethal with FH deficiency (Frezza et al, 2011). Although the mechanisms underlying these alterations in haeme metabolism are likely to be different in leiomyomas of the FH subtype than in the other leiomyomas, targeting haeme metabolism may serve as valuable strategy to treat all leiomyomas, regardless of subtype.
The leiomyoma subtypes harboured multiple different alterations affecting peptide and amino-acid metabolites, which are necessary building blocks and energy sources for tumours. Homocarnosine, which is a dipeptide derivative predominantly found in the central nervous system, was abundant across all myometrium samples and detected at markedly reduced levels in all leiomyomas. The biological function of homocarnosine remains largely unclear, although as an antioxidant it may be important in counteracting oxidative stress (Kohen et al, 1988). No previous data seem to exist on the levels of homocarnosine in normal myometrium and further studies are required to understand the role of homocarnosine in this tissue type. Specifically, leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype displayed reduction of various amino acids, their derivatives, and dipeptides, possibly reflecting increased protein synthesis. These leiomyomas showed also enrichment of dysregulated methionine, cysteine, SAM, and taurine metabolites. The observed reduction of taurine is compatible with a previous report (Mazzei et al, 2010). As SAM is the major coenzyme in reactions with methyl group transfer, these changes may reflect altered methylation of proteins and DNA in leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype (Teperino et al, 2010; Pavlova and Thompson, 2016). On the contrary, FH-deficient leiomyomas displayed accretion of valine, leucine, and isoleucine metabolites, suggesting that blockage of the TCA cycle impairs the function of the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex, which belongs to the mitochondrial dehydrogenase complex family and is essential in the metabolism of these amino acids (Harper et al, 1984). In addition, leiomyomas of the FH and HMGA2 subtypes displayed accretion of polyamines, which has been implicated in induction of cell proliferation and reduction of apoptosis (Gerner and Meyskens, 2004). Targeting polyamine metabolism may prove an effective therapy or, more importantly, a prevention mechanism for these leiomyoma subtypes, as indicated by a prior study showing that treatment with 2-difluoromethylornithine, a well-tolerated inhibitor of a central enzyme in polyamine synthesis, limits the growth of leiomyoma cells (Broaddus et al, 2004; Gerner and Meyskens, 2004).
All leiomyomas displayed alterations in a wide array of lipid classes, yet with subtype specific differences. Levels of sphingolipids and phosphatidylserines, which are structural components of cell membranes, were especially reduced in leiomyomas of the MED12 subtype. Sphingolipids are signal transducers that regulate apoptosis and proliferation (Ogretmen and Hannun, 2004). Phosphatidylserines also have a role in signalling pathways and they mediate humoral and cellular processes, including blood coagulation and phagocytosis (Vance and Steenbergen, 2005). In contrast, other important components of cell membranes, plasmalogens and diacylglycerols, were increased in leiomyomas of the FH and HMGA2 subtypes. These lipids affect the membrane properties and facilitate various signalling processes (Gómez-Fernández and Corbalán-García, 2007; Braverman and Moser, 2012). All these deregulations in lipid metabolites presumably contribute to leiomyoma development on many levels, not only by providing an energy source and building blocks for membrane biogenesis during cell growth but also by regulating signalling pathways involved in proliferation and differentiation.
The most apparent effect of FH deficiency was intracellular fumarate accumulation, which is considered tumour promoting (Adam et al, 2011). Additionally, FH-deficient leiomyomas displayed accumulation of other TCA cycle intermediates malate, succinate, αKG, and homocitrate. Prior studies using HLRCC-related tumours, FH-deficient kidney cells and tissues from mice, and a metastatic kidney cancer cell line from an HLRCC patient have detected accumulation of fumarate and succinate but have provided contradicting data on the levels of malate, αKG, and citrate (Pollard et al, 2005; Frezza et al, 2011; Tong et al, 2011; Adam et al, 2013; Yang et al, 2013; Zheng et al, 2013). Furthermore, patients with congenital fumarase deficiency, a rare autosomal-recessive disorder, display increased levels of fumarate, succinate, αKG, citrate, and malate in their physiological fluids (Allegri et al, 2010; Tregoning et al, 2013). Mullen et al (2012) demonstrated that human-derived FH-deficient kidney cancer cells use glutamine-dependent reductive carboxylation of αKG to produce citrate, acetyl coenzyme A, and remaining four-carbon TCA intermediates. This reductive carboxylation supports fatty acid synthesis allowing FH-deficient cells to maintain growth (Mullen et al, 2012). Studies using FH-deficient mouse cell lines, however, observed no evidence of reductive carboxylation (Frezza et al, 2011; Adam et al, 2013). As increased αKG/citrate ratio triggers reductive glutamine metabolism (Fendt et al, 2013), our results suggest that reductive carboxylation occurs in FH-deficient leiomyomas, but isotope-labelling studies using leiomyoma cell lines would be required for confirmation.
Based on the current knowledge of the tumourigenic mechanism of FH-deficiency, accumulation of intracellular fumarate activates transcription factor nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (NRF2) (Adam et al, 2011). NRF2 is a master regulator of antioxidant responses and it redirects glucose and glutamine into anabolic pathways including the PPP, which is an efficient source of NADPH (Mitsuishi et al, 2012; Gorrini et al, 2013). The gene expression data revealed a highly significant activation of NRF2-mediated oxidative stress response in leiomyomas of the FH subtype causing, for example, upregulation of HMOX1 (Gorrini et al, 2013; Mehine et al, 2016). This is further supported by our metabolomic and gene expression data as FH-deficient leiomyomas displayed several metabolic alterations known to be affected by activated NRF2 including increased PPP flux, validating an observation made previously in FH-deficient kidney cancer cell lines (Yang et al, 2013). All in all, NRF2 activation supports FH-deficient cell proliferation by enhancing PPP and generating NADPH, which is critical for reductive carboxylation of glutamine-derived αKG, synthesis of fatty acids, and protection against oxidative stress.
Our analysis discovered putative biomarkers for FH deficiency including argininosuccinate and N6-succinyladenosine (S-ado). Argininosuccinate is a precursor to fumarate via argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) and S-ado is formed by dephosporylation of adenylosuccinate, a substrate of adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL) that normally catalyzes formation of fumarate. FH-deficient cells seem to control the levels of fumarate by reversing or inhibiting the reactions catalyzed by ASL and ADSL leading to argininosuccinate and S-ado accumulation (Adam et al, 2013; Zheng et al, 2013; Jurecka et al, 2015). FH-deficient kidney specimens from mice as well as physiological fluids of patients with congenital fumarase deficiency display increased levels of adenylosuccinate, providing further support for the inhibition of ADSL activity in FH-deficient tissues (Allegri et al, 2010; Adam et al, 2013; Tregoning et al, 2013). The usefulness of S-ado as a biomarker and its tumourigenic role require further research. Argininosuccinate is normally produced in the urea cycle. FH-deficient kidney cancers employ exogenous arginine to produce argininosuccinate and blocking this mechanism reduces proliferation of these cells, suggesting that the arginine pathway is essential for the growth of FH-deficient tumours (Adam et al, 2013; Zheng et al, 2013). Intriguingly, clinical studies have revealed a tolerable profile for an arginine-depleting drug (Ott et al, 2013). Furthermore, Zheng et al (2013) observed abundant secretion of argininosuccinate into the urine of Fh1-deficient mice and into the growth media of FH-deficient cell lines. Thus, argininosuccinate and arginine metabolism may prove to be a robust metabolic biomarker and a treatment target for HLRCC-associated tumours, respectively.
Taken together, this study discovered novel metabolic alterations in leiomyomas involving vitamin C, various membrane lipid, peptide, and amino-acid metabolites (Figure 4), which may be essential for the growth of specific leiomyoma subtypes. Our findings show the importance of haeme and polyamine metabolism and validate the dysregulation of vitamin A in primary leiomyoma tissues. The results revealed the consequences of impaired TCA cycle associated with FH-deficient leiomyomas pinpointing biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets. Importantly, well-tolerated drugs tested in patient trials exist for many of these aberrant states.
To our knowledge, this is the first study that employs a global metabolomics approach to analyse uterine leiomyomas and corresponding myometrium. We have previously shown that the main genetic drivers of uterine leiomyomas result in distinct gene expression profiles (Mehine et al, 2016). Here we show that these genetic drivers lead to differences in the metabolomic profiles as well. Our results highlight the diversity of metabolic alterations that can underlie a similar clinical phenotype. The dysregulated metabolites identified in this study may prove to be useful biomarkers and targets for prevention and treatment of uterine leiomyomas, although future studies with larger sample sets are warranted, especially for leiomyomas with HMGA2 overexpression. Furthermore, metabolic flux studies are required to determine whether the observed changes are derived from altered flux through a pathway or altered synthesis, degradation, or transport of the metabolites. The metabolomic profile of uterine leiomyomas will contribute to understanding pathophysiology of uterine leiomyomas and provides a promising foundation for therapeutic development.
Change history
05 December 2017
This paper was modified 12 months after initial publication to switch to Creative Commons licence terms, as noted at publication
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Acknowledgements
We sincerely thank P Ikonen, S Nieminen, M Rajalaakso, I-L Svedberg, I Vuoristo, and the staffs of the Department of Pathology and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Helsinki University Hospital for technical assistance; and Metabolomics Unit, Technology Centre, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland FIMM, University of Helsinki; the Biomedicum Functional Genomics Unit; the Estonian Genome Center, University of Tartu; and Metabolon Inc. for their services. This study was supported by the Academy of Finland (Center of Excellence in Cancer Genetics Research 2012–2017, 250345), European Research Council (ERC, 695727), as well as the Cancer Society of Finland, the Maud Kuistila Foundation, the Ida Montin Foundation, the Biomedicum Helsinki Foundation, Kliinisen Kemian Tutkimussäätiö, K. Albin Johansson Foundation, Orion Research Foundation sr, and the Finnish-Norwegian Medical Foundation (personal grants to H-RH).
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Heinonen, HR., Mehine, M., Mäkinen, N. et al. Global metabolomic profiling of uterine leiomyomas. Br J Cancer 117, 1855–1864 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2017.361
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2017.361
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