ADA2-deficient cells exhibit increased levels of cell death and metabolic disturbances
Authors
- Lisa Ehlers
- Marjon Wouters
- Bethany Pillay
- Selket Delafontaine
- Giorgia Bucciol
- Marco Baggio
- Mariia Dzhus
- Anneleen Hombrouck
- Alexandra Damerau
- Lien De Somer
- Rik Schrijvers
- Steven Vanderschueren
- Maarten Jacquemyn
- Tilmann Kallinich
- Dirk Daelemans
- Bart Ghesquière
- Patrizia Agostinis
- Leen Moens
- Isabelle Meyts
Journal
- Cell Death Discovery
Citation
- Cell Death Discov 12 (1): 167
Abstract
Deficiency of adenosine deaminase 2 (DADA2) causes a complex phenotype of autoinflammation and immunodeficiency. Bone marrow failure is often refractory to treatment with tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) inhibitors and additional treatment options are needed. However, the pathomechanisms underlying the disease remain incompletely understood. The aim of this study was to examine the viability and metabolic profile of ADA2-deficient cells and to characterise the activity of different cell death pathways to advance the mechanistic understanding of DADA2. By flow cytometry and western blot, we showed that ADA2(-/-) U-937 cells and PBMCs from DADA2 patients showed significantly elevated levels of cell death compared with cells expressing wild-type ADA2. Viability of ADA2-deficient cells was not improved by inhibitors of apoptosis, necroptosis, pyroptosis and ferroptosis. Blocking of TNF-alpha, type I interferon and STING signalling as well as reintroduction of wild-type ADA2 protein did not rescue the cell death phenotype in vitro. ADA2-deficient cells had an aberrant morphology with increased cell size and granularity and were impaired in their proliferative capacity. To identify the cause of the impaired viability, we performed (13)C glucose tracer metabolomics experiments which revealed disturbances in the pentose phosphate pathway of ADA2-deficient cells. This tended to be associated with increased exposure to intracellular reactive oxygen species that was attenuated in the PBMCs of a DADA2 patient measured after successful hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Collectively, our findings established increased levels of cell death as a possible pathomechanism of DADA2 and showed that the absence of ADA2 leads to an impairment of the pentose phosphate pathway which may account for the cellular vulnerability of ADA2-deficient cells.