Methionine addiction, a fundamental and general hallmark of cancer, known as the Hoffman Effect, is due to altered use of methionine for increased and aberrant transmethylation reactions. However, the linkage of methionine addiction and malignancy of cancer cells is incompletely understood. An isogenic pair of methionine-addicted parental osteosarcoma cells and their rare methionine-independent revertant cells enabled us to compare them for malignancy, their epithelial-mesenchymal phenotype, and pattern of histone-H3 lysine-methylation. Methionine-independent revertant 143B osteosarcoma cells (143B-R) were selected from methionine-addicted parental cells (143B-P) by their chronic growth in low-methionine culture medium for 4 passages, which was depleted of methionine by recombinant methioninase (rMETase). Cell-migration capacity was compared with a wound-healing assay and invasion capability was compared with a transwell assay in 143B-P and 143B-R cells in vitro. Tumor growth and metastatic potential were compared after orthotopic cell-injection into the tibia bone of nude mice in vivo. Epithelial-mesenchymal phenotypic expression and the status of H3 lysine-methylation were determined with western immunoblotting. 143B-P cells had an IC50 of 0.20 U/ml and 143B-R cells had an IC50 of 0.68 U/ml for treatment with rMETase, demonstrating that 143B-R cells had regained the ability to grow in low methionine conditions. 143B-R cells had reduced cell migration and invasion capability in vitro, formed much smaller tumors than 143B-P cells and lost metastatic potential in vivo, indicating loss of malignancy in 143B-R cells. 143B-R cells showed gain of the epithelial marker, ZO-1 and loss of mesenchymal markers, vimentin, Snail, and Slug and, an increase of histone H3K9me3 and H3K27me3 methylation and a decrease of H3K4me3, H3K36me3, and H3K79me3 methylation, along with their loss of malignancy. These results suggest that shifting the balance in histone methylases might be a way to decrease the malignant potential of cells. The present results demonstrate the rationale to target methionine addiction for improved sarcoma therapy.
Background/Aim: Rectal cancer is a recalcitrant disease with limited treatment options. Pre-clinical studies have shown the efficacy of methionine restriction with a lowmethionine diet and oral recombinant methioninase (o-rMETase) for colorectal cancer. There are also clinical studies on methionine restriction with o-rMETase for other recalcitrant cancer types. The goal of the present study was to determine the efficacy of a low-methionine diet and o-rMETase on a rectal cancer patient. Patient and Methods: A 55-year-old man diagnosed with recurrent locally-advanced rectal-cancer was treated with o-rMETase and a low-methionine diet, during which time, he did not receive standard chemotherapy. Disease stability was monitored by carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels, sigmoidoscopy, and computed tomography (CT). Results: The patient was diagnosed with stage II rectal cancer (adenocarcinoma) in 2018. After neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy, the patient received total mesorectal excision (TME) in 2018. Local recurrence was found by sigmoidoscopy one year later. The patient was given chemotherapy, the recurrent lesion shrunk, and was then removed endoscopically in December 2019, with positive margins. The tumor did not become apparent for about a year after that. An endoscopic examination performed in December 2020, revealed a local recurrence. Since that time, the patient had an elevated CEA. The patient went on o-rMETase and a low-methionine diet from January 2021. Since then, the patient's CEA level has remained stable for the next year and a half. He received sigmoidoscopy and CT regularly, and the tumor size has not changed. Conclusion: This patient's clinical course indicates that o-rMETase and a low-methionine diet may be effective for rectal cancer, for long-term disease stabilization. Further case studies and clinical trials are needed to determine the generality of the present result.Colorectal cancer is the fourth-most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States (1). Rectal cancer accounts for about one-third of these cases. Regarding locally-advanced disease (T3-4, N0), neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy are the standard-of-care for rectal cancer. Although the 3-year diseasefree survival rate has increased from 62.9 % to 75.9 % for locally-advanced disease, it is still not sufficient (2-4). It is also important for patients with rectal cancer to preserve anal function. Most patients with rectal cancer, especially those whose tumor is located close to the anal verge, have undergone total mesorectal excision with a colostomy.Methionine addiction is a fundamental and general hallmark of cancer (5-7) and is termed the Hoffman effect (8). Since cancer cells require a greater amount of methionine than normal cells, which is due to the excess transmethylation reactions in cancer cells, they cannot survive under the condition of methionine restriction (9-11). We have developed recombinant methioninase (rMETase) (12), which catabolizes methionine, and have shown th...
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