Author
Listed:
- Sonali Sharma
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Benjamin J. Rodems
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Cameron D. Baker
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Christina M. Kaszuba
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester)
- Edgardo I. Franco
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester)
- Bradley R. Smith
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Takashi Ito
(Fukui Prefectural University)
- Kyle Swovick
(University of Rochester)
- Kevin Welle
(University of Rochester)
- Yi Zhang
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Philip Rock
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Francisco A. Chaves
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Sina Ghaemmaghami
(University of Rochester
University of Rochester)
- Laura M. Calvi
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Archan Ganguly
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- W. Richard Burack
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Michael W. Becker
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Jane L. Liesveld
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Paul S. Brookes
(University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Joshua C. Munger
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Craig T. Jordan
(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus)
- John M. Ashton
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
- Jeevisha Bajaj
(University of Rochester Medical Center
University of Rochester Medical Center)
Abstract
Signals from the microenvironment are known to be critical for development, stem cell self-renewal and oncogenic progression. Although some niche-driven signals that promote cancer progression have been identified1–5, concerted efforts to map disease-relevant microenvironmental ligands of cancer stem cell receptors have been lacking. Here, we use temporal single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) to identify molecular cues from the bone marrow stromal niche that engage leukaemia stem-enriched cells (LSCs) during oncogenic progression. We integrate these data with our human LSC RNA-seq and in vivo CRISPR screen of LSC dependencies6 to identify LSC–niche interactions that are essential for leukaemogenesis. These analyses identify the taurine–taurine transporter (TAUT) axis as a critical dependency of aggressive myeloid leukaemias. We find that cysteine dioxygenase type 1 (CDO1)-driven taurine biosynthesis is restricted to osteolineage cells, and increases during myeloid disease progression. Blocking CDO1 expression in osteolineage cells impairs LSC growth and improves survival outcomes. Using TAUT genetic loss-of-function mouse models and patient-derived acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cells, we show that TAUT inhibition significantly impairs in vivo myeloid leukaemia progression. Consistent with elevated TAUT expression in venetoclax-resistant AML, TAUT inhibition synergizes with venetoclax to block the growth of primary human AML cells. Mechanistically, our multiomic approaches indicate that the loss of taurine uptake inhibits RAG-GTP dependent mTOR activation and downstream glycolysis. Collectively, our work establishes the temporal landscape of stromal signals during leukaemia progression and identifies taurine as a key regulator of myeloid malignancies.
Suggested Citation
Sonali Sharma & Benjamin J. Rodems & Cameron D. Baker & Christina M. Kaszuba & Edgardo I. Franco & Bradley R. Smith & Takashi Ito & Kyle Swovick & Kevin Welle & Yi Zhang & Philip Rock & Francisco A. C, 2025.
"Taurine from tumour niche drives glycolysis to promote leukaemogenesis,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 644(8075), pages 263-272, August.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:644:y:2025:i:8075:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09018-7
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09018-7
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