Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood cancer. Despite the tremendous increase in overall survival in children, relapse and long-term toxic side-effects of the current therapies still remain major drawbacks. Whereas most healthy cells take up serine and glycine from their environment, some cancer cells activate endogenous serine/glycine production and become addicted to this pathway to support their proliferation. The host lab previously identified two genetics lesions (the RPL10 R98S mutation and NKX2- 1 transcription factor overexpression) that induce serine/glycine synthesis dependence in ALL, allowing delineation of patients benefiting therapeutics targeting this serine/glycine synthesis addiction. Moreover, the host lab discovered that the antidepressant sertraline inhibits serine/glycine synthesis enzyme SHMT1/2. Hence, we aim to improve current ALL therapy by exploring combination therapies of conventional chemotherapies or novel agents with sertraline in serine/glycine addicted ALL cell models and PDX mouse models, with the ultimate goal to target ALL cells more specifically, improve therapy efficacy and reduce toxicity, relapse and even therapy failure.
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Paulien Verstraete
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Paulien Verstraete (Tue,) studied this question.