eLife (Mar 2023)

Multi-targeted therapy resistance via drug-induced secretome fucosylation

  • Mark Borris D Aldonza,
  • Junghwa Cha,
  • Insung Yong,
  • Jayoung Ku,
  • Pavel Sinitcyn,
  • Dabin Lee,
  • Ryeong-Eun Cho,
  • Roben D Delos Reyes,
  • Dongwook Kim,
  • Soyeon Kim,
  • Minjeong Kang,
  • Yongsuk Ku,
  • Geonho Park,
  • Hye-Jin Sung,
  • Han Suk Ryu,
  • Sukki Cho,
  • Tae Min Kim,
  • Pilnam Kim,
  • Je-Yoel Cho,
  • Yoosik Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.75191
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Cancer secretome is a reservoir for aberrant glycosylation. How therapies alter this post- translational cancer hallmark and the consequences thereof remain elusive. Here, we show that an elevated secretome fucosylation is a pan-cancer signature of both response and resistance to multiple targeted therapies. Large-scale pharmacogenomics revealed that fucosylation genes display widespread association with resistance to these therapies. In cancer cell cultures, xenograft mouse models, and patients, targeted kinase inhibitors distinctively induced core fucosylation of secreted proteins less than 60 kDa. Label-free proteomics of N-glycoproteomes identified fucosylation of the antioxidant PON1 as a critical component of the therapy-induced secretome (TIS). N-glycosylation of TIS and target core fucosylation of PON1 are mediated by the fucose salvage-FUT8-SLC35C1 axis with PON3 directly modulating GDP-Fuc transfer on PON1 scaffolds. Core fucosylation in the Golgi impacts PON1 stability and folding prior to secretion, promoting a more degradation-resistant PON1. Global and PON1-specific secretome de-N-glycosylation both limited the expansion of resistant clones in a tumor regression model. We defined the resistance-associated transcription factors (TFs) and genes modulated by the N-glycosylated TIS via a focused and transcriptome-wide analyses. These genes characterize the oxidative stress, inflammatory niche, and unfolded protein response as important factors for this modulation. Our findings demonstrate that core fucosylation is a common modification indirectly induced by targeted therapies that paradoxically promotes resistance.

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