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INFORMATION FOR

    Application of Team Science To Elucidate Sex-Specific Differences of Colorectal Cancer Metabolism

    March 19, 2026

    Yale Cancer Center Grand Rounds | March 17, 2026

    Presented by: Dr. Saj Khan and Caroline Johnson

    ID
    13956

    Transcript

    • 00:00This this dynamic duo,
    • 00:02that are gonna be giving
    • 00:03us grand rounds today. It's
    • 00:04my proud privilege to introduce
    • 00:06doctor Khan. Doctor Saj Khan
    • 00:08is our section chief of,
    • 00:10HBB mixed tumors. He's a
    • 00:12wonderful clinician,
    • 00:14and an incredible researcher.
    • 00:16We've known each other for
    • 00:17over a decade. He finished
    • 00:19his fellowship at the University
    • 00:21of Chicago, and we tried
    • 00:22recruiting him when I was
    • 00:24at my first job, and
    • 00:25now I have the proud
    • 00:26privilege of working with him.
    • 00:28His science has been focused
    • 00:29a lot on the
    • 00:31underpinnings of liver metastases,
    • 00:32which you'll hear a little
    • 00:33bit about, but also about
    • 00:35other things, including, biomarkers or
    • 00:37pancreas cancer.
    • 00:39And then with him is
    • 00:41doctor Johnson.
    • 00:42Together, they have won numerous
    • 00:44awards, numerous NIH peer funded
    • 00:46grants,
    • 00:48and I think, exemplify
    • 00:50how team science works. Doctor
    • 00:51Johnson did her PhD in
    • 00:53analytical chemistry, which I didn't
    • 00:55know you did,
    • 00:56at the Imperial College of
    • 00:58London, which is one of
    • 00:59the premier schools,
    • 01:01and she is now,
    • 01:03held a position as an
    • 01:04associate professor at the School
    • 01:05of Public Health in epidemiology.
    • 01:08Together, I think both of
    • 01:09them have explored,
    • 01:10tumor metabolites
    • 01:12and genetic differences,
    • 01:14around liver metastases,
    • 01:16and they'll share some of
    • 01:17their journey about the team
    • 01:18science as well as,
    • 01:21perhaps a little bit about
    • 01:22liver metastases.
    • 01:23So welcome, Saj and Caroline.
    • 01:40Hey. Well, thank you very
    • 01:41much, for the introduction. And
    • 01:42we'd also like to thank
    • 01:44the Yale Cancer Center for
    • 01:45inviting us to give a
    • 01:46talk today about
    • 01:48our collaborative team science work,
    • 01:50specifically looking at sex disparities
    • 01:52in cancer.
    • 01:53So as mentioned, I'm from
    • 01:55the School of Public Health.
    • 01:56I'm in the Department of
    • 01:57Environmental Health Sciences, and doctor
    • 01:59Khan
    • 02:00is in, the Department of
    • 02:02Surgery at Yale School of
    • 02:03Medicine. And we've been working
    • 02:04together for over nine years
    • 02:06now.
    • 02:07So over the next forty
    • 02:08five minutes,
    • 02:09Sajhi is going to start
    • 02:11our presentation by introducing some
    • 02:13of the background to sex
    • 02:14disparities
    • 02:15in
    • 02:16both, basic research and also
    • 02:18clinical research. And then we're
    • 02:20gonna, take turns talking about
    • 02:21some of our collaborative research,
    • 02:23which is mostly in the
    • 02:25area of looking at the
    • 02:26role of asparagine
    • 02:28in colorectal cancer for female
    • 02:30patients. And then we'll end
    • 02:31talking about some of our,
    • 02:33future directions.
    • 02:34Thank you.
    • 02:41Okay. So
    • 02:43so thanks again for, for
    • 02:45the opportunity to speak. Thanks,
    • 02:46Kieran, for that very nice
    • 02:47introduction.
    • 02:49You know, cancer is the
    • 02:50second leading cause of deaths
    • 02:52worldwide.
    • 02:54About ten million people each
    • 02:56year,
    • 02:57die of cancer across the
    • 02:58globe.
    • 02:59Cancers,
    • 03:00affects people of, every walk
    • 03:02of life. It affects,
    • 03:04females and males,
    • 03:06and there's no race or
    • 03:07ethnic background in the world
    • 03:09that's immune to the development
    • 03:10of cancer.
    • 03:14Cancer is not just a
    • 03:15global problem, but it is
    • 03:16a local problem here in
    • 03:18Connecticut for women and for
    • 03:19men.
    • 03:20Here are examples of three
    • 03:22patients I've operated on over
    • 03:23the last twelve and a
    • 03:24half years at Yale throughout
    • 03:25the health system. We have
    • 03:26a large health system.
    • 03:28The left picture is a
    • 03:29patient of a seventy year
    • 03:31old male with colorectal cancer
    • 03:32liver metastases who I did
    • 03:34a right hepatectomy on years
    • 03:35ago.
    • 03:36In the center is a
    • 03:37seventy five year old female,
    • 03:40who had a diagnosis of
    • 03:40pancreas adenocarcinoma,
    • 03:42who I did a WIPA
    • 03:43on several years ago.
    • 03:44And on the right is
    • 03:45a seventy one year old
    • 03:46female who had a gastric
    • 03:48gastrointestinal
    • 03:49stromal tumor,
    • 03:50a giant one for which
    • 03:51we did a a gastrectomy
    • 03:53and a distal pancreatectomy.
    • 03:58Here are some gross and
    • 03:59microscopic
    • 04:00pictures of patients who underwent
    • 04:01who underwent of a patient
    • 04:03who underwent a colectomy for
    • 04:04colon adenocarcinoma.
    • 04:06The pictures were nicely prepared
    • 04:08for by doctor Zuchin Zhang
    • 04:09from our department of pathology.
    • 04:11On the top left, you
    • 04:12can see a picture of,
    • 04:14a gross picture of the
    • 04:15ascending colon adenocarcinoma.
    • 04:17And on the bottom and
    • 04:18the right, you can see
    • 04:19beautiful histology pictures of a
    • 04:20lymph node metastasis
    • 04:22and full thickness invasion.
    • 04:30Here are the ten leading
    • 04:31causes of new cancer diagnoses
    • 04:33in the United States and
    • 04:34the ten leading cause of
    • 04:35cancer deaths in the United
    • 04:36States in females and males.
    • 04:39What I do want you
    • 04:39to notice that even for
    • 04:40the nonreproductive
    • 04:41cancers,
    • 04:42the incidence,
    • 04:44is not equivalent.
    • 04:46So it's something we'll get
    • 04:47back to a little bit
    • 04:48later in this talk.
    • 04:50And the reason for that
    • 04:51is because sex and gender
    • 04:52have a major influence on
    • 04:54human health.
    • 04:55Generally speaking, sex refers to
    • 04:57the biological characteristics of an
    • 04:59individual,
    • 05:00while gender refers to the
    • 05:01sociocultural
    • 05:03roles and sexual identity of
    • 05:05an individual.
    • 05:06So the perp for the
    • 05:07purposes of this talk,
    • 05:09Carol and I are gonna
    • 05:10focus on the sex of
    • 05:11an individual, and we'll interchangeably
    • 05:13use the words female and
    • 05:14women,
    • 05:15males and men, when discussing
    • 05:17the individual sexes.
    • 05:20There are differences which exist
    • 05:22between sexes in regards to
    • 05:23disease development,
    • 05:24diagnosis, treatment response, which are
    • 05:27rooted in genetic differences between
    • 05:29women and men.
    • 05:30And understanding the effect of
    • 05:31sex as a biological variable
    • 05:33will improve the health of
    • 05:35women and men
    • 05:36across the globe.
    • 05:39Unfortunately, there's been a global
    • 05:41bias and historical neglect of
    • 05:42studying sex as a biological
    • 05:44variable in both basic and
    • 05:45clinical research,
    • 05:47over the years.
    • 05:49In biomedical research, females are
    • 05:51underrepresented
    • 05:52in clinical trials and research,
    • 05:54and, biological sex has long
    • 05:56been ignored in sciences, and
    • 05:58male animals have been predominantly
    • 06:00used.
    • 06:00So So the majority of
    • 06:01research,
    • 06:03in our world has been
    • 06:04heavily biased towards men.
    • 06:09The neglect of research where
    • 06:11sex is considered as a
    • 06:12biological variable includes cancer research,
    • 06:14and we're here at a
    • 06:15premier cancer center,
    • 06:17and this is something that
    • 06:18we wanna focus a bit
    • 06:19more of this talk on.
    • 06:21Sex disparities are evident in
    • 06:23nonreproductive
    • 06:23cancers as the incidence of
    • 06:25mortality,
    • 06:26are higher in males compared
    • 06:27to females.
    • 06:29And, unfortunately, sex disparities are
    • 06:31poorly understood at a molecular
    • 06:33level.
    • 06:34This includes the impact which
    • 06:35sex plays on genetic differences,
    • 06:38epigenetic alterations,
    • 06:40and sex hormones.
    • 06:42Furthermore, there's emerging research, which
    • 06:44reveals that x and y
    • 06:46genes encode for regulators of
    • 06:47metabolism,
    • 06:48immunity,
    • 06:49and tumor suppression.
    • 06:55There are sex disparities that
    • 06:56are evident in the major
    • 06:57types of treatment we offer
    • 06:58for our patients here. We
    • 07:00have doctor Traga, who's a
    • 07:01surgical oncologist. So when we
    • 07:02look at cancer surgery performed,
    • 07:04lung cancer surgery, believe it
    • 07:06or not, for, female patients
    • 07:08actually lead to a better
    • 07:09are associated with a better
    • 07:11survival
    • 07:11and less likely experience of
    • 07:13sepsis complications suggesting that there
    • 07:15may be,
    • 07:16differences in the biology
    • 07:18of a female with a
    • 07:19male even from surgery.
    • 07:21Radiation treatment for esophagus squamous
    • 07:23cell carcinoma has a better
    • 07:24survival for females compared to
    • 07:25males.
    • 07:27And for systemic therapies, and
    • 07:28we have a lot of,
    • 07:29medical oncologists on the Zoom
    • 07:31and on the audience, multiple
    • 07:32chemotherapy regimens are associated with
    • 07:34the longer survival for esophagus
    • 07:36cancer,
    • 07:37stomach cancer, non small cell
    • 07:38lung cancer, and glioblastoma
    • 07:40for females.
    • 07:42EGFR inhibitors, the targeted drugs,
    • 07:44lead to longer survival for
    • 07:45females.
    • 07:47And interestingly, immune therapies for
    • 07:49non small cell lung cancer
    • 07:51lead to longer survival for
    • 07:52females, but actually for males
    • 07:54that get into,
    • 07:56IO,
    • 07:57they have longer survivals for,
    • 07:59again, implying that there's a
    • 08:00difference in the biology,
    • 08:02of, female and male cancers.
    • 08:06There are multiple examples of
    • 08:07sex not being considered in
    • 08:09preclinical
    • 08:10research settings as well.
    • 08:12In cancer cell lines, there
    • 08:14are, believe it or not,
    • 08:14greater stocks of nonreproductive
    • 08:16male cell lines compared compared
    • 08:18to female cell lines.
    • 08:20Single sex analyses fail to
    • 08:22consider male and female responses.
    • 08:25Many studies just show an
    • 08:26averaging of responses across the
    • 08:28models for both sexes.
    • 08:30When one looks very carefully
    • 08:32at cell culture media, the
    • 08:33serum of the calf fetus
    • 08:35is sometimes mixed with male
    • 08:36and female derived,
    • 08:38organism organs
    • 08:40and more often is not
    • 08:41scrutinized.
    • 08:42There's a mismatch of cell
    • 08:44culture media with cultured cells.
    • 08:46And finally, with mouse models,
    • 08:48you know, there are also
    • 08:49problems. Cancer drugs are often
    • 08:52tested in premenopausal
    • 08:53mice where the majority of
    • 08:54cancers diagnosed,
    • 08:56in females are postmenopausal,
    • 08:58of age.
    • 08:59And there are, of course,
    • 09:00financial considerations. We're in constrained
    • 09:02times with our financial budgets
    • 09:04right now for a lot
    • 09:05of our research,
    • 09:06and a lot of that
    • 09:07leads investigators
    • 09:08to,
    • 09:10favoring single sex studies in
    • 09:11younger mice for financial considerations.
    • 09:15As you can imagine, if
    • 09:16there's a problem with the
    • 09:17basic science, it translates into
    • 09:19clinical trials as well.
    • 09:21Women have lower enrollment in
    • 09:23colorectal cancer and lung cancer
    • 09:25trials compared to males.
    • 09:27Women are underrepresented
    • 09:28in, IO, or immune therapy
    • 09:31trials.
    • 09:32In a study, that looked
    • 09:34at clinical trials and FDA
    • 09:35approved modern anticancer drugs,
    • 09:38fifty percent of the studies
    • 09:39did not report the drug
    • 09:40and efficacy,
    • 09:42of these drugs in females.
    • 09:44And women are also known
    • 09:46to be underrepresented in these
    • 09:47trials, and this is most
    • 09:48this is most pronounced in
    • 09:50GI cancer
    • 09:51clinical trials, lung cancer, and
    • 09:52leukemia trials.
    • 09:57Despite these challenges,
    • 09:59which we've,
    • 10:00mentioned, you know, there are
    • 10:02some ongoing efforts which believes
    • 10:04that which provide hope that
    • 10:06things will get better in
    • 10:07the future,
    • 10:08and more sex is gonna
    • 10:09be looked at as biological
    • 10:10variable in scientific research.
    • 10:13There have been efforts made
    • 10:14to include females and males
    • 10:15in cells, tissues, animals, and
    • 10:18humans.
    • 10:19And, notably, there have been
    • 10:20some important policy changes made
    • 10:22in the last twenty six
    • 10:23years, which are helping helping
    • 10:25helping move,
    • 10:27biomedical research forward.
    • 10:29In two thousand and one,
    • 10:30the Institute of Medicine
    • 10:31convened a think tank that
    • 10:33concluded that sufficient evidence
    • 10:35existed, which shows that there's
    • 10:36biological differences of women and
    • 10:38men that influence treatment and
    • 10:40prevention strategies.
    • 10:43In two thousand and seven,
    • 10:44the World Health Organization
    • 10:46passed resolution to urge researchers
    • 10:48to split their data according
    • 10:50to sex
    • 10:51and include gender analysis when
    • 10:53appropriate.
    • 10:55In two thousand eleven, the
    • 10:56Canadian Institutes of Health,
    • 10:59expected research applicants to integrate
    • 11:01sex and gender,
    • 11:02into their research design. To
    • 11:04show an example of progress
    • 11:05from two thousand eleven to
    • 11:07two thousand and twenty two,
    • 11:08the research proposal for the
    • 11:09Canadian Institute of Health Research
    • 11:11increased from twenty two percent
    • 11:13to eighty three percent.
    • 11:15In nineteen ninety three, the
    • 11:17NIH Revitalization Act required the
    • 11:19inclusion of women in NIH,
    • 11:22funded clinical research. Unfortunately, many
    • 11:24researchers did not, follow this
    • 11:26recommendation, and sometimes it takes
    • 11:28a nudge and sometimes you
    • 11:29have to bring back good
    • 11:30ideas. And in two thousand
    • 11:32sixteen, the NIH
    • 11:33passed the Century Cures Act
    • 11:35that called for the inclusion
    • 11:37of male and female sexes
    • 11:38in studies involving cells, tissues,
    • 11:40and animals.
    • 11:41And most recently,
    • 11:43during the Biden administration, the
    • 11:44White House initiative on women's
    • 11:45health research called to improve
    • 11:47women's health research by prioritizing
    • 11:49investments
    • 11:50in,
    • 11:51women's health research.
    • 12:01Let's see here.
    • 12:04Okay.
    • 12:07So, so, hopefully, so far,
    • 12:09we've convinced you that,
    • 12:11studying sex as a biological
    • 12:12variable is an important thing
    • 12:14to do, and it's gonna
    • 12:15improve cancer outcomes.
    • 12:16But how do you go
    • 12:17about
    • 12:18performing this kind of impactful
    • 12:19research?
    • 12:20Sometimes when one starts a
    • 12:21research project,
    • 12:23it can seem like a
    • 12:24long windy road. You don't
    • 12:25know where to start. You
    • 12:26don't know where the the
    • 12:27goal line is. You don't
    • 12:28know where the end is.
    • 12:29So so how do you
    • 12:30get go about doing the
    • 12:31research?
    • 12:32So for one, no one
    • 12:34can walk the road anymore,
    • 12:35alone.
    • 12:36The NIH,
    • 12:38has realized that scientific problems,
    • 12:40become more challenging given the
    • 12:41vast amount of information, technologies,
    • 12:43and resources that are ever
    • 12:45present,
    • 12:46and we're seeing this more
    • 12:47and more exponentially in the
    • 12:48last one or two years
    • 12:49with AI.
    • 12:50The increase in number of
    • 12:51publications in science and engineering
    • 12:54is
    • 12:55with multiple authors is increasing
    • 12:57exponentially.
    • 12:59So in order to tackle,
    • 13:01complex problems, the team science
    • 13:03approach is the answer. And
    • 13:04in order to understand this,
    • 13:06we would first like to
    • 13:06define what team science exactly
    • 13:08is.
    • 13:10Team science is a collaborative
    • 13:11effort to address a scientific
    • 13:13challenge,
    • 13:14by leveraging experts in different
    • 13:16fields,
    • 13:17who need a compelling clinically
    • 13:19driven research question to start.
    • 13:22The tree the team,
    • 13:23is comprised of, individuals that
    • 13:25address a clinically focused
    • 13:27research project.
    • 13:29They are comprised of members
    • 13:30with training and expertise,
    • 13:33from multiple scientific disciplines.
    • 13:35The team works together to
    • 13:36combine and integrate,
    • 13:38different knowledge skills perspectives,
    • 13:40from different fields.
    • 13:41And this approach,
    • 13:44enables for medical and scientific
    • 13:46communities to solve complex problems
    • 13:48and help, people worldwide.
    • 13:51To apply a team science
    • 13:53approach, first, one needs to
    • 13:54assemble a team. So the
    • 13:56research question should drive who
    • 13:57the members of the team
    • 13:58should be. So to use
    • 13:59a sports analogy, I I
    • 14:01enjoy baseball and basketball.
    • 14:03So, you know, we're the
    • 14:05March Madness is underway right
    • 14:07now. So,
    • 14:08so in order for, you
    • 14:10know, the Yukon women's team
    • 14:11to win another championship, every
    • 14:13member of the team doesn't
    • 14:14need to be a three
    • 14:15point shooter. You need a
    • 14:16well balanced team with good
    • 14:17defenders, good rebounders,
    • 14:19a good point guard, so
    • 14:20it's a well balanced team.
    • 14:21To win a World Series
    • 14:23in baseball so Caroline is
    • 14:24a Red Sox fan. I'm
    • 14:26a Yankees fan, but we
    • 14:27still get along.
    • 14:28But every player can't be
    • 14:30a Derek Jeter. Every player
    • 14:31can't be a Mookie Betts.
    • 14:32You need a well rounded
    • 14:33team of good pitchers, defenders,
    • 14:36batters,
    • 14:37in order to win a
    • 14:38world series.
    • 14:40And finally, you know, one
    • 14:42needs to identify the right
    • 14:43people for the team.
    • 14:45Generally speaking, here's a solid
    • 14:46component of what Caroline and
    • 14:48I have used over the
    • 14:49last, you know, nine years
    • 14:50for our team.
    • 14:52So,
    • 14:53you know, you need good
    • 14:54collaborators, biostatisticians,
    • 14:56students and pre docs who
    • 14:58are passionate about the research
    • 14:59project that the PIs are
    • 15:00interested in, good mentorship and
    • 15:02advisorship. We both feel strongly
    • 15:04about mentorship.
    • 15:05Good lab staff that's supportive,
    • 15:07and good postdocs in creating
    • 15:09a good environment.
    • 15:12Doctor Johnson and I both,
    • 15:14have individual labs at the
    • 15:15Yale School of Public Health
    • 15:17and the Yale School of
    • 15:18Medicine where we create synergy
    • 15:20in our research projects,
    • 15:21from the team members so
    • 15:23the intellectual,
    • 15:24sum is far greater than
    • 15:25the individuals. So the intellectual
    • 15:27sum is greater than the
    • 15:28individuals. So so we strongly
    • 15:30advocate for a team science
    • 15:31approach,
    • 15:32and together, our labs study
    • 15:34how metabolism and biological sex
    • 15:36influence colorectal cancer and patient
    • 15:38outcomes.
    • 15:40Our team science approach has
    • 15:42resulted in science, which is
    • 15:43moving the field forward by
    • 15:44tackling GI cancers.
    • 15:47Our approach has led to
    • 15:48multiple high impact publications over
    • 15:50the last nine,
    • 15:51less than nine years in
    • 15:53addition to millions of dollars
    • 15:54of funding from the NIH,
    • 15:55which has has enabled us
    • 15:57to contribute to society's understanding
    • 15:58of GI cancers
    • 16:00both globally globally and locally
    • 16:02here in New England.
    • 16:04I'm gonna turn it over
    • 16:05to doctor Johnson.
    • 16:07Thank you, Saj. So,
    • 16:09I'm now gonna be discussing
    • 16:10some of our collaborative research
    • 16:12that has used metabolomics
    • 16:14to identify sex specific
    • 16:16metabolism in colorectal cancer.
    • 16:19So I'd first like to
    • 16:20start by explaining why it's
    • 16:22important to understand the diversity
    • 16:23and functions of metabolites in
    • 16:25cancer.
    • 16:26Well, metabolites and actually metabolic
    • 16:28rewiring can actually help the
    • 16:30transition
    • 16:31from a primary tumor to
    • 16:32a metastasis. So you see
    • 16:34here on this diagram
    • 16:35that actually the production of
    • 16:37acidic metabolites like lactate
    • 16:39can help the the primary
    • 16:40tumor cells undergo interversation
    • 16:42into the,
    • 16:44circulatory system.
    • 16:46Once the tumor cells are
    • 16:47in the circulatory system, they
    • 16:48actually undergo a high amount
    • 16:50of oxidative stress. So the
    • 16:52cells ramp up their production
    • 16:53of glutathione and NADPH
    • 16:55to survive.
    • 16:56Once they reach their new
    • 16:58seeded sites, such as the
    • 16:59liver or the lung, the
    • 17:01cells are actually in a
    • 17:02state of dormancy
    • 17:03because this is a completely
    • 17:04new,
    • 17:05microenvironment,
    • 17:06different nutrients present there.
    • 17:08Then they start to ramp
    • 17:09up their anabolic metabolism, producing
    • 17:11more metabolites and also nucleic
    • 17:13acids and proteins and lipids
    • 17:14to grow in the new
    • 17:16organ. So you can see
    • 17:17there are many bottlenecks along
    • 17:19this cascade that can actually
    • 17:20be targeted,
    • 17:22by using by looking at
    • 17:23metabolites and targeting metabolites to
    • 17:26improve prognosis.
    • 17:29But, you know, we came
    • 17:30to think about sex differences
    • 17:32in metabolism because there is
    • 17:33this fundamental fact that nearly
    • 17:35all aspects of metabolism do
    • 17:37show this sexual dimorphism.
    • 17:39So even eighty years ago,
    • 17:41the first paper that really
    • 17:42showed this was, come from
    • 17:44Marseille, and this professor noted
    • 17:46differences in fact deposition.
    • 17:48So this is a quote
    • 17:49from his paper
    • 17:53man's fat mass, though she
    • 17:55is as often obese as
    • 17:56a man or fatter, she's
    • 17:57very nice,
    • 17:59she dies less often from
    • 18:00the metabolic complications of obesity.
    • 18:03So women resist the loss
    • 18:04of body energy stores while
    • 18:06men mobilize energy stores promptly.
    • 18:09And you can see this
    • 18:10quite clearly if you look
    • 18:11at carbohydrate and lipid metabolism
    • 18:13at rest and exercise and
    • 18:15the differences between men and
    • 18:16women. So during rest, females
    • 18:19tend to incorporate free fatty
    • 18:20acids into triglycerides
    • 18:22to store fat. And then
    • 18:23in exercise, they preferentially use
    • 18:25these, lipids as a fuse
    • 18:27fuel source.
    • 18:28Whereas for males, at rest,
    • 18:29they tend to oxidize these
    • 18:31free fatty acids. And during
    • 18:33exercise, they preferentially use carbohydrates
    • 18:35of a as a fuel
    • 18:36fuel source. So this is
    • 18:38just one example of how
    • 18:39there are sex differences in
    • 18:41metabolism, but it obviously goes
    • 18:42much more broader than this.
    • 18:46And, there was a review
    • 18:47paper out about five years
    • 18:48ago, which collated a lot
    • 18:50of, studies that has seen
    • 18:51the same effect in cancer
    • 18:53cells between differences between males
    • 18:55and females.
    • 18:56So highlighted here in the
    • 18:58green are is a metabolic
    • 18:59pathway that's preferentially used
    • 19:02by cancer cells in males,
    • 19:03and in purple is a
    • 19:05pathway that's used preferentially by
    • 19:07cancer cells in females.
    • 19:08So you can see glucose
    • 19:10is converted into pyruvate and
    • 19:12lactate in males preferentially.
    • 19:14But for females, the intermediates
    • 19:16in glycolysis
    • 19:16actually get shunted through to
    • 19:18the pentose phosphate pathway
    • 19:20and to generate NADPH,
    • 19:22and are used as metabolic
    • 19:23building blocks as well in
    • 19:25metabolites.
    • 19:26So you can see even
    • 19:27in these core metabolic pathways,
    • 19:28there really are profound sex
    • 19:30differences.
    • 19:33And then if we look
    • 19:34at colorectal cancer, as doctor
    • 19:36Khan mentioned, there are sex
    • 19:37differences in incidence of mortality,
    • 19:39where males tend to have
    • 19:40a higher incidence of mortality
    • 19:42of this disease.
    • 19:43But actually, new studies coming
    • 19:44out from IARC just in
    • 19:46the past year have seen
    • 19:47that for early onset colorectal
    • 19:48cancer
    • 19:49in the UK and Australia,
    • 19:51it's almost at parity now
    • 19:52for men and women, which
    • 19:53is very interesting as this
    • 19:55may this must be some
    • 19:56sort of environmental factor that's
    • 19:58driving this.
    • 19:59But if we look at
    • 20:00the colorectal, we can see
    • 20:01here that it's typically divided
    • 20:03into these two parts, the
    • 20:04right side and the left
    • 20:05side. And you can see
    • 20:06just how different they are
    • 20:07in terms of the frequency
    • 20:09of molecular features.
    • 20:10So on the right side,
    • 20:11highlighted here in green, you
    • 20:13tend to have more,
    • 20:15CpG islemethylated
    • 20:16phenotype,
    • 20:18more BRAF mutations, and more
    • 20:20KRAS mutations in these tumors.
    • 20:22Whereas those tumors on the
    • 20:23left side tend to have
    • 20:24more p fifty three and
    • 20:25APC mutations.
    • 20:27Importantly,
    • 20:28women tend to develop more
    • 20:30right sided cancers than left
    • 20:31sided cancers, whereas it's the
    • 20:33opposite for males.
    • 20:35Another important fact is that
    • 20:36a right sided patient tends
    • 20:38to have overall worse prognosis
    • 20:40than a left sided colorectal
    • 20:42cancer patient. And this is
    • 20:43even after studies have adjusted
    • 20:45for things such as,
    • 20:46therapy use when the stage
    • 20:48of the cancer diagnosis
    • 20:50and also the type of
    • 20:51screening.
    • 20:52So you can see just,
    • 20:53the differences along
    • 20:55the colorectum,
    • 20:56for males and females.
    • 20:58So then we had, the
    • 20:59question if sex differences exist
    • 21:02in where tumors occur within
    • 21:04the colorectum, could metabolism
    • 21:05also differ in these tumors?
    • 21:09So the first collaborative study
    • 21:10that we did, was with
    • 21:12Yatzi San, who was a
    • 21:13Miles per hour student and
    • 21:14Doctor. Mironova, who was a
    • 21:16resident,
    • 21:17and they looked at publicly
    • 21:18available data. So we went
    • 21:19to NCBI's
    • 21:21GEO
    • 21:22and we found five gene
    • 21:23expression datasets, which had information
    • 21:25for colorectal cancer patients and
    • 21:27also the sex of the
    • 21:28patient
    • 21:29and where the tumor occurred
    • 21:31within the colorectum.
    • 21:32And what you can see
    • 21:33here is just a,
    • 21:35diagram of principal components analyses.
    • 21:38So basically each one of
    • 21:39these dots represents a gene
    • 21:40expression
    • 21:42profile for one of these
    • 21:43tumors.
    • 21:44And when the dots are
    • 21:45sort of more closely clustered
    • 21:46together, it means they're more
    • 21:47similar in their gene expression
    • 21:49profile.
    • 21:50So the figure on the
    • 21:51left,
    • 21:52shows
    • 21:53differences in gene expression between
    • 21:55the right side and the
    • 21:56left sided tumors for women,
    • 21:58and the figure in b
    • 21:59shows the differences between men
    • 22:01and women for right sided
    • 22:02cancers.
    • 22:03So you can see just
    • 22:04how different even the gene
    • 22:06expression at the gene expression
    • 22:07level these,
    • 22:09these
    • 22:10are.
    • 22:11We then model this gene
    • 22:12expression data,
    • 22:14using a tool called MetaCore
    • 22:16and with help from Rolando,
    • 22:18Garciemilian
    • 22:19at the the Yale Medical
    • 22:21Library.
    • 22:22And what we found was
    • 22:23five pathways that seem to
    • 22:24be enriched in women that
    • 22:26had right sided colorectal cancer.
    • 22:28So this is just one
    • 22:29of them here, and it's
    • 22:30the carbohydrate responsive element binding
    • 22:32protein pathway.
    • 22:34And it basically shows that
    • 22:35these genes work together to
    • 22:36regulate
    • 22:37protein kinase a signaling,
    • 22:39also AMPK and GPCRs.
    • 22:42And we've seen the same
    • 22:43effect actually in more of
    • 22:44our studies now, doing metabolomics.
    • 22:46So we have replicated this.
    • 22:51So now I'd like to
    • 22:52move on to, our sort
    • 22:53of metabolomics analysis.
    • 22:55So we decided to,
    • 22:57design this study to investigate
    • 22:59sex differences in metabolism in
    • 23:00tissues from the colorectal cancer
    • 23:02patients.
    • 23:03And doctor Khan and I
    • 23:04collaborated with doctor Patty Patey,
    • 23:06rather, at Memorial Sloan Kettering
    • 23:08Cancer Center.
    • 23:10But in the nineteen nineties,
    • 23:11he collected tumor tissues and
    • 23:13normal tissues
    • 23:14and also liver metastases and
    • 23:16normal liver from over seven
    • 23:18hundred and sixty two cases.
    • 23:21The tumors are actually taken
    • 23:22in the OR and then
    • 23:23snap frozen and put in
    • 23:25the minus eighty freezer.
    • 23:26So they're really perfect for
    • 23:27mass spectrometry
    • 23:28analysis.
    • 23:30In twenty eighteen, we were
    • 23:32lucky to receive a r
    • 23:33twenty one grant, which enabled
    • 23:35us to hire somebody to
    • 23:36go to the medical vault
    • 23:38at Sloan Kettering and transpose
    • 23:40all of the medical records
    • 23:41for the seven hundred and
    • 23:43sixty two patients. So we
    • 23:44then had information
    • 23:46more information about these patients,
    • 23:48including their out outcomes. So
    • 23:50it's very valuable resource.
    • 23:53So for our first study,
    • 23:54we wanted to keep it
    • 23:55very clean. So we just
    • 23:56looked at stage one to
    • 23:57three,
    • 23:58cases.
    • 23:59At the time, we didn't
    • 24:00know if the stage four
    • 24:01cases had been treated with
    • 24:03chemotherapy
    • 24:04beforehand, which could change the
    • 24:05metabolism.
    • 24:06And we just looked at
    • 24:07the left and the right
    • 24:08sided cases.
    • 24:10So we had a hundred
    • 24:11and two, tissues from males
    • 24:13and ninety five from females,
    • 24:15and then we also had
    • 24:16about thirty nine normal mucosa.
    • 24:21So doctors Kai and Retre,
    • 24:23back in twenty eighteen, performed
    • 24:25the untargeted metabolomic analysis.
    • 24:27And basically what we did
    • 24:29was extracted the tissues for
    • 24:31metabolites,
    • 24:32and then we ran them
    • 24:33through our LC QTof,
    • 24:35mass spectrometry
    • 24:36system.
    • 24:37And this system allows us
    • 24:38to look in an unbiased
    • 24:40manner at everything that's present
    • 24:42within these tumor tissues that
    • 24:44is below basically twelve hundred
    • 24:45daltons, all these low molecular
    • 24:47weight, metabolites.
    • 24:49So in our analysis, we
    • 24:51can look at about forty
    • 24:52thousand different features.
    • 24:54In our lab, we have
    • 24:56a database now that's comprised
    • 24:58of one thousand standards, so
    • 24:59we're able to directly match
    • 25:01these features to the standards.
    • 25:03And then we performed a
    • 25:05statistical analysis, and then we
    • 25:06looked to see if any
    • 25:07of these metabolites were prognostic
    • 25:09by sex.
    • 25:11So, actually, our initial analysis
    • 25:13showed us,
    • 25:14similar findings to what I
    • 25:15showed you in that figure
    • 25:16before where we saw that
    • 25:17male tumors for males tended
    • 25:19to have sort of a
    • 25:20high production of lactate,
    • 25:21whereas for females, it seemed
    • 25:23that, glucose was shunted into
    • 25:24the pentose phosphate pathway,
    • 25:27and produce NADPH.
    • 25:29But there was one pathway
    • 25:30that really stood out to
    • 25:31us, and that was the,
    • 25:33asparagine metabolic pathway,
    • 25:35where in female patients,
    • 25:37we could see that asparagine
    • 25:38was produced at a high
    • 25:40amount in stage one, two,
    • 25:41and three tissues.
    • 25:43So this is just a
    • 25:43diagram here of the abundance
    • 25:45of asparagine in the normal
    • 25:46tissues and then the stage
    • 25:48one, two, and three
    • 25:49for males and females. So
    • 25:51you can see for male
    • 25:52tissues that it was only
    • 25:53at stage three that asparagine
    • 25:54was significantly increased.
    • 25:57Around the same time, we
    • 25:59saw this paper from UCLA,
    • 26:01and they noted that asparagine
    • 26:03could actually be used when
    • 26:04the tumor tissues are nutrient
    • 26:06deplete and need to keep
    • 26:07growing. And what asparagine
    • 26:09does, it helps increase,
    • 26:11mTOR and also protein synthesis
    • 26:14and nucleotide synthesis.
    • 26:15And it can actually,
    • 26:17also increase the uptake of
    • 26:19serine and threonine to help
    • 26:20tumor growth.
    • 26:21So we measured these metabolites,
    • 26:23and again, we saw that
    • 26:25they were increased,
    • 26:26only really in the female
    • 26:27tumors at stage one to
    • 26:29three. So this sort of
    • 26:30helped us develop our hypothesis
    • 26:32that, you know, asparagine could
    • 26:33be very important. And here
    • 26:35you can see here that
    • 26:36asparagine, anthranine, and serine are
    • 26:38positively correlated as well.
    • 26:40So this suggested to us
    • 26:42that asparagine increases in tumors
    • 26:44from female patients to drive
    • 26:45growth under nutrient deplete conditions.
    • 26:50So asparagine is a nonessential
    • 26:52amino acid, so it can
    • 26:53actually be derived from the
    • 26:54diet. But the tumor cells
    • 26:56can produce it themselves through
    • 26:57this, for Asparte and through
    • 26:59this asparagine synthetase,
    • 27:02reaction,
    • 27:03which require requires glutamine and
    • 27:05ATP.
    • 27:06So we went to TCGA
    • 27:08and the CoEDGE,
    • 27:10resource, and we looked at
    • 27:11ASNS expression in females and
    • 27:13males.
    • 27:14And we saw that if
    • 27:15a female patient had high
    • 27:17ASNS expression, they had a
    • 27:18poor outcome compared to or
    • 27:20five year over so honestly,
    • 27:22not five years. It's longer
    • 27:23than that. Sorry.
    • 27:24They had a poor outcome
    • 27:25compared to those that had
    • 27:27low medium ASNS expression.
    • 27:29Whereas for males, there was
    • 27:30no, difference whatsoever.
    • 27:34So in summary for this
    • 27:35section, we see that differences
    • 27:37exist in tumor metabolites
    • 27:39between females and males,
    • 27:41That stage one to three
    • 27:42tumors from females have elevated
    • 27:44asparagine
    • 27:45that could drive cancer growth
    • 27:46during nutrient to complete conditions.
    • 27:48And then overexpression
    • 27:50of ASNS in TCGA is
    • 27:52prognostic for females only. So
    • 27:54I'm gonna turn the next
    • 27:55section to such.
    • 27:59So the next question we
    • 28:00wanted to ask is, is
    • 28:02there a link between colorectal
    • 28:03cancer tumor metabolites
    • 28:05and prognosis when stratified by
    • 28:07sex?
    • 28:10We used the same biobank
    • 28:11that doctor Johnson had mentioned
    • 28:13and evaluated individual metabolites for
    • 28:15prognosis.
    • 28:16In a multivariate
    • 28:18in in the multivariable Cox
    • 28:19proportional,
    • 28:22hazard model where we controlled
    • 28:23for clinical factors and established
    • 28:26colorectal
    • 28:27genes, such as MSI high
    • 28:29status,
    • 28:30BRAF,
    • 28:31KRAS,
    • 28:31we found that the eighteen
    • 28:33listed metabolites
    • 28:34on this slide were associated
    • 28:36with prognosis in a self
    • 28:37specific manner.
    • 28:39Specifically, we found that asparagine,
    • 28:42on the top in yellow,
    • 28:44and serine,
    • 28:45in the middle in blue,
    • 28:47were associated with a poorer
    • 28:48five year survival in females,
    • 28:51whereas the same metabolites were
    • 28:52associated with a better survival
    • 28:54for males.
    • 28:56Furthermore,
    • 28:56succinate,
    • 28:57was associated with a favorable
    • 28:59survival in females and a
    • 29:00worse survival for males.
    • 29:05We next tested for sex
    • 29:07specific associations after adjusting for
    • 29:09the same clinical and pathologic
    • 29:11variables,
    • 29:12which I mentioned in the
    • 29:13last slide, with a specific
    • 29:14focus on the asparagine synthesis
    • 29:16pathway.
    • 29:18Asparagine abundance was very significantly
    • 29:20associated with poor survival and
    • 29:22poor recurrence free survival for
    • 29:24females,
    • 29:25whereas it was associated with
    • 29:27the favorable survival for males.
    • 29:29So females had a a
    • 29:30hazard ratio of six point
    • 29:32three nine for overall
    • 29:33death with overexpression
    • 29:35of asparagine.
    • 29:38We then, performed a COX
    • 29:40survival analysis looking at the
    • 29:42asparagine levels.
    • 29:44High expression of asparagine, shown
    • 29:45in blue,
    • 29:47on these Kaplan Meier curves
    • 29:48had a worse overall survival
    • 29:51and a worse recurrence free
    • 29:52survival,
    • 29:54compared to low asparagine levels,
    • 29:55which are shown in red,
    • 29:57and this finding was only
    • 29:58found in female patients.
    • 30:00In males in male patients,
    • 30:02asparagine actually was not associated
    • 30:03with survival at all. So
    • 30:05just to summarize a bit,
    • 30:06so Caroline had mentioned about
    • 30:08ASNS. This is the asparagine
    • 30:09metabolite, so,
    • 30:11the story is starting to
    • 30:12build. So in summary,
    • 30:16sex specific differences
    • 30:18exist between individual metabolites and
    • 30:20prognosis.
    • 30:23Asparagine metabolism is linked to
    • 30:25poor survival in females.
    • 30:28And that we talked about
    • 30:29asparagine metabolite abundance, being,
    • 30:32being the case.
    • 30:34Serum metabolite abundance is linked
    • 30:36to poor survival in males.
    • 30:40Caroline's gonna take over each.
    • 30:43So, yeah, so now we
    • 30:44turned our research to look
    • 30:45at the functional effect of
    • 30:47ASNS and Asparagine
    • 30:48on colorectal cancer metabolism.
    • 30:51So this work has been
    • 30:52primarily read, led by doctor
    • 30:54Ola Aladelacun,
    • 30:56And he's been looking at
    • 30:58the role of the ASNS
    • 30:59gene and also asparagine in
    • 31:01driving
    • 31:02cancer growth in in vitro
    • 31:03and in vivo models.
    • 31:05So the first first thing
    • 31:06that we did was knockout
    • 31:08ASNS in a colorectal cancer
    • 31:10cell line. So HCT one
    • 31:12one six is a male
    • 31:13cell line. And you can
    • 31:14see here from this diagram
    • 31:16at the top,
    • 31:17the two cell lines there,
    • 31:20are cultured without sparigene in
    • 31:21the media. And you can
    • 31:23see how knockout of ASNS,
    • 31:25really affects the way these
    • 31:26spheroids grow. They have a
    • 31:27really hard time growing.
    • 31:29But if we add asparagine
    • 31:30back into the media, you
    • 31:31can see it actually does
    • 31:33rescue cell growth. So this
    • 31:35just shows for this cell
    • 31:36line that ASNS and asparagine
    • 31:38are important to maintain,
    • 31:40the growth of the cancer.
    • 31:43We then took these cell
    • 31:44lines and did a subcutaneous
    • 31:46xenograft,
    • 31:47experiment
    • 31:48using immunocompromised
    • 31:49mice. This was done in
    • 31:51collaboration
    • 31:51with the Center for Precision
    • 31:54Modeling Core.
    • 31:55So we had ten mice
    • 31:56per group, males and females
    • 31:58inoculated with the ASNS,
    • 32:00wild type or, knockout cell
    • 32:03line, and then they were
    • 32:04grown for about three weeks.
    • 32:06So we looked at the
    • 32:07growth kinetics and also the
    • 32:09metabolomics of the tumors as
    • 32:10well.
    • 32:12So the diagram on the
    • 32:13left shows you the asparagine
    • 32:15abundance,
    • 32:16within the tumors.
    • 32:18You can see that in
    • 32:19green, these are the knockout
    • 32:21cell lines that were grown
    • 32:22in the mice, and you
    • 32:23can see they do produce
    • 32:24less asparagine
    • 32:25than the wild type cell
    • 32:27line. But the difference is
    • 32:28about the same for both
    • 32:29males and females.
    • 32:31When we look at tumor
    • 32:32volume,
    • 32:32we can see that the,
    • 32:34the tumors that grow in
    • 32:36the males
    • 32:37grow the fastest, but the
    • 32:38knockout does have an effect
    • 32:39on how these tumors grow.
    • 32:41They grow a lot slower.
    • 32:43And and then for the
    • 32:43female, the cell lines, they
    • 32:45both grow slower in the
    • 32:46females compared to the males,
    • 32:47but the knockout has the
    • 32:49slowest tumor growth.
    • 32:51But our next question was,
    • 32:53you know, what is the
    • 32:54effect of asparagine supplementation?
    • 32:56So thinking about this in
    • 32:57terms of we find asparagine
    • 32:59readily in our diet and
    • 33:00can be produced by the
    • 33:01microbiome as well.
    • 33:03So we took the ASNS
    • 33:05wild type,
    • 33:06cell lines and did a
    • 33:07xenograft again,
    • 33:08in the males and females
    • 33:10and gave the mice an
    • 33:11IP injection of one or
    • 33:13ten MPK asparagine
    • 33:15about every three to seven
    • 33:16days and, let these tumors
    • 33:18grow again for about three
    • 33:19weeks.
    • 33:20So you can see in
    • 33:21the in the males, the
    • 33:23asparagine did slightly increase tumor
    • 33:25volume at the earlier stages,
    • 33:27but ultimately
    • 33:28at the end of three
    • 33:28weeks, the tumor volume was
    • 33:30about the same.
    • 33:31But surprising to us,
    • 33:33we saw that Asparagine actually
    • 33:35decreased tumor growth in the
    • 33:37female mice, which was opposite
    • 33:38to our hypothesis. But I
    • 33:39like it when that happens
    • 33:40because it leads to new
    • 33:41questions
    • 33:42and new findings.
    • 33:44So one thing we thought
    • 33:45is that perhaps the asparagine
    • 33:46being present in the in
    • 33:48the female mice is having
    • 33:49a negative feedback on the
    • 33:51production of asparagine in the
    • 33:52tumor and maybe knocking you
    • 33:54know, decreasing the expression of
    • 33:55ASNS.
    • 33:57So we looked at ASNS
    • 33:58expression in the tumor tissues,
    • 34:00and we saw that it
    • 34:01was indeed decreased only in
    • 34:03the female tumors, and it
    • 34:04wasn't changed in the male
    • 34:06tumors after asparagine supplementation.
    • 34:09We then looked at asparagine
    • 34:11and aspartate levels in the
    • 34:12tumors, and we could see
    • 34:13that for both the males
    • 34:14and the females that were
    • 34:16given,
    • 34:16exogenous asparagine,
    • 34:18asparagine levels did increase within
    • 34:20the tumors.
    • 34:21And then surprising to us,
    • 34:22we saw that aspartate was
    • 34:24decreased in the female tumors
    • 34:26only
    • 34:27that were given asparagine.
    • 34:29So aspartate is a substrate
    • 34:30for this reaction.
    • 34:32So aspartate actually requires a
    • 34:34transporter to be brought into
    • 34:35the cell,
    • 34:37the cancer cell, whereas asparagine
    • 34:38can use a transporter or
    • 34:40it can passively
    • 34:41diffuse.
    • 34:42So we looked at the
    • 34:43transporter SLC one a three,
    • 34:46and we saw again that
    • 34:47this was significantly
    • 34:48decreased in the female mice
    • 34:50that received asparagine,
    • 34:52but but it was actually
    • 34:52increased in the male mice.
    • 34:54You can just see how
    • 34:55different these are between the
    • 34:56mouse models just by sex
    • 34:58of the mouse.
    • 35:00So de novo asparagine production
    • 35:02decreased in the female tumors
    • 35:03only. So I'll just talk
    • 35:05about sort of the hormonal
    • 35:07changes that we saw as
    • 35:08well in these mice that
    • 35:09had asparagine
    • 35:11supplemented.
    • 35:12So we measured estradiol
    • 35:14just using a serum estradiol
    • 35:15using ELISA.
    • 35:17And what we found was
    • 35:18surprising to us again was
    • 35:20that when the mice received
    • 35:21asparagine,
    • 35:22it's actually increased estradiol levels
    • 35:24in the serum of the
    • 35:25female mice, but it decreased
    • 35:27estradiol levels in the serum
    • 35:29of the male mice.
    • 35:30So we didn't unfortunately have
    • 35:31the ovaries from these,
    • 35:34from these mice, but we
    • 35:35did look at aromatase expression
    • 35:37in the tumors.
    • 35:38And we found as well
    • 35:39that asparagine actually increased aromatase
    • 35:42expression in the tumors themselves
    • 35:43from female mice, but there
    • 35:45was no effect in the
    • 35:46males.
    • 35:47And this is interesting because
    • 35:48estradiol is a known anti
    • 35:50proliferative for colorectal cancer and
    • 35:52does provide protection for women
    • 35:53against colorectal cancer. So this
    • 35:55increase in estradiol and aromatase
    • 35:57could be potentially
    • 35:59having that sort of effect
    • 36:01on decreasing the tumor growth.
    • 36:04We then looked at the
    • 36:04estrogen receptors, and we found
    • 36:06no difference in estrogen receptor
    • 36:08beta or alpha expression.
    • 36:10So we looked at Gepa,
    • 36:12which is
    • 36:13a membrane bound and very
    • 36:15nutrient sensitive estrogen receptor.
    • 36:17And what we found was
    • 36:18that this actually did change
    • 36:19in expression in response to
    • 36:21asparagine
    • 36:22being supplemented.
    • 36:23So it's significantly decreasing the
    • 36:25females and again increasing the
    • 36:27males.
    • 36:28So we did some further
    • 36:30investigations into the link between
    • 36:31GPRA and ASNS,
    • 36:33and we see they're actually
    • 36:34linked to each other through
    • 36:35this integrated stress response pathway,
    • 36:38which is typically activated as
    • 36:40well under nutrient stress.
    • 36:41So you may recognize some
    • 36:43of these,
    • 36:44molecules here if you work
    • 36:45in this area, but we
    • 36:46could see that downstream of
    • 36:48of GPO signaling,
    • 36:49we have AMPK
    • 36:50and we have p r
    • 36:51three k and mTOR
    • 36:53and also ASNS.
    • 36:55So in our models, we
    • 36:56see that in the females,
    • 36:57when we give them asparagine,
    • 36:59this has a knock on
    • 36:59effect of decreasing this pathway
    • 37:01and decreasing tumor growth. But
    • 37:03in the males, it appears
    • 37:04to be an opposite effect.
    • 37:08In another study, led by
    • 37:10Lingan Liu from, CDE at
    • 37:12YSPH,
    • 37:13he looked at G Pro
    • 37:14expression
    • 37:15in TCGA
    • 37:16again. And what we saw
    • 37:18was that at the advanced
    • 37:19stages of tumor growth, so
    • 37:21at stage three and four,
    • 37:23female patients,
    • 37:24with high GPRA expression have
    • 37:26a poor outcome compared to
    • 37:28low expression
    • 37:29where we don't see that
    • 37:30effect for males and we
    • 37:31don't see that effect in
    • 37:32the early stages as well.
    • 37:36So I just wanna mention
    • 37:37in two slides a resource
    • 37:39that might also be useful
    • 37:40for Yale Cancer Center members.
    • 37:42So within this space, we
    • 37:44were also wondering what the
    • 37:45scale of sex disparities in
    • 37:47cancers are.
    • 37:48So I have this very
    • 37:49talented PhD student, Shiny Shen,
    • 37:51who should be graduating soon.
    • 37:53She's commented by both me
    • 37:55and Saaj, and she wanted
    • 37:56to understand what really is
    • 37:58the scale of these differences.
    • 37:59So what are the molecular
    • 38:01differences,
    • 38:02potential therapeutic efficacy and adverse
    • 38:05responses,
    • 38:06and also some environmental factors
    • 38:07that could affect risk, such
    • 38:09as different exposures and the
    • 38:11microbiome.
    • 38:12But when she looked in
    • 38:13the literature, she found this
    • 38:14information
    • 38:15very disparate,
    • 38:16and there were no real
    • 38:17databases that held this information.
    • 38:20And if there was a
    • 38:20database, it was quite old
    • 38:22or didn't really have everything
    • 38:23in there.
    • 38:24So she decided to make
    • 38:25her own database, which is
    • 38:27called Onco Sexome.
    • 38:29And what she's done is
    • 38:30amass all of the sex
    • 38:31differences that she could find
    • 38:33on seventy one different cancers.
    • 38:35So we have four domains
    • 38:36here. I can't talk about
    • 38:37it in detail because of
    • 38:38time, but basically we have,
    • 38:41sex differences on over two
    • 38:43thousand drugs, the anticancer drugs,
    • 38:45in terms of pharmacokinetics,
    • 38:47adverse responses, side effects. You
    • 38:49know, throughout we see with
    • 38:51five Fluorouracil, it has poor
    • 38:52efficacy and more side effects
    • 38:54for females with colorectal cancer.
    • 38:56That's just one finding from
    • 38:57this.
    • 38:59Over three hundred and sixty
    • 39:00risk factors using data from
    • 39:02IARC,
    • 39:03and then nearly twelve thousand
    • 39:04different molecular differences in terms
    • 39:07of genes, immune cells,
    • 39:10hormones, and proteins.
    • 39:12And then nearly fifteen hundred
    • 39:14different microbes that are changing
    • 39:16their risk,
    • 39:17for different types of cancers.
    • 39:19So if you're working in
    • 39:19this area,
    • 39:21I'd encourage you to check
    • 39:22it out.
    • 39:24So just to summarize,
    • 39:26we do see in our
    • 39:27studies that ASNS knockout slows
    • 39:29tumor growth and decreases tumor
    • 39:31asparagine levels.
    • 39:33Asparagine supplementation
    • 39:34has this differential effect on
    • 39:36CRC tumors that express ASNS,
    • 39:40and GPO signaling could be
    • 39:41driving these differences,
    • 39:43where high GPO is actually
    • 39:44linked to poor outcomes for
    • 39:46advanced stage females only.
    • 39:48So I'm gonna have, Serge
    • 39:50wrap up the last.
    • 39:55The team science approach for
    • 39:57the Johnson and Khan Labs
    • 39:58for nearly a decade has
    • 40:00generated a lot of exciting
    • 40:01findings,
    • 40:02but we continue to build
    • 40:03what we've done together.
    • 40:05As part of our current
    • 40:06r o one, our labs
    • 40:07are looking at sex specific
    • 40:09clinical factors which regulate asparagin
    • 40:11metabolism in colorectal cancer patients.
    • 40:14We are building a well
    • 40:15annotated clinical database.
    • 40:18Jean, who's in my lab,
    • 40:20is working on this where
    • 40:21he's building a robust database
    • 40:24of patients with stage three
    • 40:25colon cancer, stage four colon
    • 40:27cancer, stage four colon cancer,
    • 40:29liver metastases,
    • 40:31and he is
    • 40:32developing tissue microarrays,
    • 40:34and he's about to start
    • 40:36to doing spatial transcriptomics experiments
    • 40:37and RNA sequencing experiments
    • 40:40on the tumor blocks to
    • 40:41better characterize the asparagine
    • 40:43and the estrogen pathways.
    • 40:45At the same time, we're
    • 40:46also prospectively collecting tumors and
    • 40:49stool from patients in collaborations
    • 40:51with our wonderful colorectal colleagues
    • 40:53at the Yale New Haven
    • 40:54Hospital, Bridgeport Hospital. Again, we
    • 40:56have a great health system
    • 40:57here, so two different sites
    • 40:59of surgeons,
    • 41:00have are helping us, crew
    • 41:02some of our patients here.
    • 41:03And finally, we're closely collaborating
    • 41:05with doctor Juthen Roper, who's
    • 41:07a gastroenterologist
    • 41:08at Duke University and has
    • 41:09been a wonderful partner for
    • 41:10Caroline and I.
    • 41:13Through our collaboration with doctor
    • 41:14Roper,
    • 41:15we're using an orthotopic
    • 41:17mouse model using
    • 41:19CRISPR edited
    • 41:20ASNS edited cells to better
    • 41:22recapitulate
    • 41:23the metabolic changes
    • 41:25in the colorectal cancer during
    • 41:26cancer development and the progression
    • 41:28towards liver metastasis, which is
    • 41:30a great model to study
    • 41:31our, stage three and stage
    • 41:33four colorectal cancer.
    • 41:37In addition to our RO1,
    • 41:39we are building on some
    • 41:40of the additional high impact
    • 41:41work, that we've done, some
    • 41:43of which is already published,
    • 41:44and some of which is
    • 41:45based on one of our
    • 41:46R21s
    • 41:47on social disadvantages
    • 41:49and patient outcomes, which are
    • 41:51linked to increased deaths in
    • 41:52African Americans with colorectal cancer,
    • 41:55and the microbiome.
    • 41:56We continue to use the
    • 41:57National Cancer Database. I see
    • 41:59Wafa here in the audience.
    • 42:00She's another member of our
    • 42:01lab who's working on that
    • 42:02right now in the All
    • 42:03of Us database, which, Sam
    • 42:05Butinski, who's one of our
    • 42:06former surgical who's a current
    • 42:07surgical resident, was in the
    • 42:09lab,
    • 42:10has been using to examine
    • 42:11risk factors and barriers to
    • 42:13GI cancer care and the
    • 42:14well-being.
    • 42:15And finally, our labs have
    • 42:17also shown,
    • 42:18through the work of, Montana
    • 42:20Morris, who's actually a research
    • 42:22fellow at University of Pennsylvania,
    • 42:23and Doctor Abhishek Jain, who
    • 42:25is a member of the
    • 42:26Johnson Lab, who is now
    • 42:27a faculty at SUNY Albany,
    • 42:28have shown that there and
    • 42:30they've shown that there's clear
    • 42:31metabolic
    • 42:32heterogeneity
    • 42:33on colon cancer liver metastases,
    • 42:35based on the site of
    • 42:36the primary tumor of the
    • 42:37sidedness, the right sided versus
    • 42:39the left side going to
    • 42:40one of Caroline's earlier slides.
    • 42:43So in conclusion,
    • 42:44studying sex as a biological
    • 42:46variable is important in the
    • 42:47pursuit towards precision medicine.
    • 42:51All the work presented by
    • 42:52doctor Johnson and I, however,
    • 42:54is clearly a team effort.
    • 42:55So here's our acknowledgment slide,
    • 42:57and it shows the current
    • 42:58members of each of our
    • 42:59labs, and it acknowledges the
    • 43:00many previous members who we
    • 43:02have been fortunate to mentor.
    • 43:04We have had wonderful collaborations
    • 43:06at Yale, both at the
    • 43:07School of Public Health and
    • 43:08the School of Medicine across
    • 43:09multiple departments,
    • 43:11and some of those individuals
    • 43:12are listed here.
    • 43:13Across the United States, we're
    • 43:15fortunate to have great collaborations
    • 43:16with doctor Jatin Roper at
    • 43:18Duke University and, doctor Philip
    • 43:20Pady at Memorial Sloan Kettering
    • 43:21Cancer Center.
    • 43:22So we thank you for
    • 43:23your time, and the floor
    • 43:25is open for questions.
    • 43:27Thank you very much.
    • 43:37I think there's some microphones
    • 43:38here of, being with Mozart.
    • 43:50That was a great talk.
    • 43:52Thank you very much.
    • 43:54In one of the slides,
    • 43:56you mentioned that there
    • 43:58were seven hundred and something
    • 44:00specimens from the Sloan Kettering
    • 44:02database over a thirty year
    • 44:04period or something. It doesn't
    • 44:06seem like very many. So
    • 44:07did you have to choose
    • 44:08different specimens, or how how
    • 44:11come there were only seven
    • 44:12hundred and sixty?
    • 44:14Yeah. Do you want me
    • 44:15to answer that? I don't
    • 44:16know the answer to that.
    • 44:17Okay.
    • 44:18You know, that was developed
    • 44:20over it's it it just
    • 44:21shows how much hard work
    • 44:22was to get to those
    • 44:23seven hundred sixty two. So
    • 44:25those were accrued,
    • 44:26for, you know, about fifteen
    • 44:28years or so,
    • 44:29and part of it when
    • 44:30I was a research fellow
    • 44:31in, at Memorial Sloan Kettering.
    • 44:33And
    • 44:34but, you know,
    • 44:36I think some of it
    • 44:37came down to some being
    • 44:38practical about certain things, about
    • 44:40what time the tumor was
    • 44:41removed in the operating room
    • 44:43and who was around that
    • 44:44day,
    • 44:45because these had to be
    • 44:47captured and snap frozen and,
    • 44:49prepared freshly so they could
    • 44:50be used for subsequent analyses.
    • 44:52But,
    • 44:53but, it's it's actually one
    • 44:55of the largest biorepositories
    • 44:57in the world.
    • 44:58So, but it did you
    • 45:00know, ideally, we would have
    • 45:01had more, but I think,
    • 45:02you know, seven hundred sixty
    • 45:03two is, but those are
    • 45:05all of the cases from
    • 45:06the biorepository.
    • 45:15Yeah.
    • 45:19Thank you for the presentation.
    • 45:22Did you,
    • 45:23assess the the immunostatice
    • 45:27of your patients?
    • 45:28Particular, for instance,
    • 45:30cytokine,
    • 45:31chemokine,
    • 45:33those parameters.
    • 45:35That's one. Number two,
    • 45:38you're you're talking about
    • 45:40the difference of the, aging
    • 45:42process,
    • 45:43a sex
    • 45:46and,
    • 45:47among the patient with
    • 45:49how about the print
    • 45:51the picture of aging
    • 45:54in other age
    • 45:56into the picture,
    • 45:58and then relate that to
    • 46:00the
    • 46:01sex hormone?
    • 46:04Yeah. So that there are
    • 46:05two great questions.
    • 46:06For the immune status, we
    • 46:08haven't looked at that, but
    • 46:09I think that's something that
    • 46:10we can look at with
    • 46:11the micro rate, the
    • 46:14TMAs rather that we're developing
    • 46:16in the lab.
    • 46:18In terms of age, so
    • 46:19our studies primarily have focused
    • 46:21on individuals
    • 46:22over fifty five. So I
    • 46:24think they're fifty five to
    • 46:25eighteen. There probably is some,
    • 46:27you know, range within
    • 46:29that age group as well
    • 46:30in terms of the metabolites.
    • 46:33For the prognostic work, we
    • 46:34do
    • 46:35adjust for age to take
    • 46:36that into account,
    • 46:38but we have started some
    • 46:39new studies,
    • 46:40last year on early onset
    • 46:41colorectal cancer. So for patients
    • 46:44under the age of fifty,
    • 46:45We had a paper out
    • 46:46earlier this year with that
    • 46:48data.
    • 46:49We don't have a huge
    • 46:50number of cases, so we
    • 46:52didn't stratify by sex initially.
    • 46:55I think there's about fifty
    • 46:56cases for early onset, but
    • 46:58we do see some, you
    • 46:59know, striking differences compared to
    • 47:01late onset.
    • 47:03But we have a study
    • 47:04right now where we are
    • 47:05looking at early onset.
    • 47:07We found
    • 47:08actually, Asparagine doesn't seem to
    • 47:09be coming up as an
    • 47:11important pathway for the early
    • 47:13onset, but we have,
    • 47:15also found data in collaboration
    • 47:17with other individuals to validate
    • 47:19that work even though it's,
    • 47:20like, smaller
    • 47:21sample sizes. So, yeah, it's
    • 47:23definitely
    • 47:24an important thing to look
    • 47:25at. And in our in
    • 47:27our current collections,
    • 47:29Yale, we are looking at
    • 47:30things such as, oral contraceptive
    • 47:33use,
    • 47:34HRT use, and,
    • 47:37anything
    • 47:38else. Oophorectomy.
    • 47:40Oophorectomy
    • 47:41as well and things like
    • 47:42that. So
    • 47:49yep.
    • 47:51Since you did
    • 47:53metabolomics
    • 47:55and also renate the asparagin
    • 47:57sensitivities
    • 47:58may play clear on there.
    • 48:01Did you ever look into
    • 48:02the possibility
    • 48:04actually asparagin,
    • 48:07over
    • 48:07aspartate
    • 48:09ratio
    • 48:11as a perimeter.
    • 48:13Maybe you'll find the more
    • 48:14significance,
    • 48:16more
    • 48:16drastic difference there using the
    • 48:19ratio and relating that to
    • 48:21in the in the plasma.
    • 48:23That's just one suggestion.
    • 48:26Another is
    • 48:28the we actually intend to
    • 48:30assess the in the pancreatic
    • 48:32cancer's
    • 48:33situation.
    • 48:34The cytokine, chemokine
    • 48:37profile
    • 48:38of the patient on the
    • 48:40different
    • 48:41treatment.
    • 48:42So if you're interested, you
    • 48:44can come to us. We
    • 48:45use
    • 48:46the beads to evaluate that.
    • 48:48Okay. At least the more
    • 48:50than ten
    • 48:51cytokine, chemokine.
    • 48:52Mhmm. Perhaps we can help
    • 48:54you on some of those
    • 48:56aspects. Thank you. I think
    • 48:57it's very generous.
    • 48:58Yeah. I think with the
    • 48:59ratio, it's a little bit
    • 49:00tricky because
    • 49:01asparagine can come like, if
    • 49:03we're looking at,
    • 49:04clinical samples, asparagine can come
    • 49:07from the diet as well
    • 49:09and also from microbial production.
    • 49:13So we have some studies
    • 49:15planned in the mouse models,
    • 49:17actually, where we're
    • 49:19going to be or we
    • 49:21currently have a study where
    • 49:22we're knocking out ASNS in
    • 49:23a bacterial cell line with
    • 49:25Andy Goodman's lab. So we're
    • 49:27going to see what effect
    • 49:28that might have on the
    • 49:29tumor and then also modulate
    • 49:30the diet.
    • 49:32So yeah. But that's a
    • 49:33good idea. Thanks.
    • 49:35I mean, I I think
    • 49:36that's phenomenal. You know, obviously,
    • 49:38it's a wonderful work over
    • 49:40a decade for all the
    • 49:41the samples that have been
    • 49:42collected, the science that has
    • 49:43come forth.
    • 49:44I think one of the
    • 49:45challenges for metabolomics is, of
    • 49:47course, the,
    • 49:49you know, there's so many
    • 49:50variables to adjust for,
    • 49:52including, say, genomics, including,
    • 49:55you know, the dietary
    • 49:57concerns, immune modulation.
    • 50:01And and I think also
    • 50:02this field of functional metabolomics
    • 50:03of, like, how do you
    • 50:04actually look at, you know,
    • 50:05maybe,
    • 50:06labeling some of these molecules
    • 50:08and seeing if they're coming
    • 50:09up in this.
    • 50:10So, you know, I I
    • 50:11I sense that you're thinking
    • 50:12about animal models as your
    • 50:14next step to to confirm
    • 50:15your work. But how are
    • 50:17you going to account for
    • 50:17all this heterogeneity that's that's
    • 50:19involved in thinking about colon
    • 50:21cancers in general? You know?
    • 50:23Because I think diet is
    • 50:24different, and your CMS subclasses
    • 50:26are different. So what are
    • 50:27what are your guys' thoughts
    • 50:28on how to address that?
    • 50:30Try.
    • 50:32Yeah. So that that's a
    • 50:33great question, Kieran. So,
    • 50:35so that's what we're, you
    • 50:36know, working on right now
    • 50:38to figure out,
    • 50:39because there are different areas
    • 50:41that could explain some of
    • 50:42our findings in regards to
    • 50:43asparagine. And the question is,
    • 50:44is it inherent to the
    • 50:45tumor in and of itself,
    • 50:48which is where,
    • 50:49the spheroid and the organoid
    • 50:50model is becomes very useful.
    • 50:52Is it coming from,
    • 50:54the diet?
    • 50:55So, hence, the animal model
    • 50:57that we have, we can
    • 50:58adjust the asparagine in the
    • 50:59chow. But in addition to
    • 51:01that, we're prospectively collecting,
    • 51:03a questionnaire for our patients
    • 51:05to see what their dietary
    • 51:07intake may be representative of
    • 51:08asparagine two to see if
    • 51:09it's coming from the environment
    • 51:10or the diet. And, the
    • 51:12work that Caroline mentioned with
    • 51:13Andy Goodman,
    • 51:15there's a very good,
    • 51:16mouse model that's being used,
    • 51:18to look if the microbiome
    • 51:19might be driving some of
    • 51:20those findings as well too.
    • 51:21So I think, you know,
    • 51:23to answer the question, stay
    • 51:25tuned. Hopefully, in a few
    • 51:26years, we'll have some, more
    • 51:27specific answers to that.
    • 51:31Of course.
    • 51:32I think the problem of
    • 51:34current approach
    • 51:36is too much reductionist
    • 51:38approach.
    • 51:39You have to consider
    • 51:41system biology
    • 51:42approach.
    • 51:44So when you look at
    • 51:45the those marker
    • 51:47and then you're looking for
    • 51:48the parameter in the plasma,
    • 51:51so if you focus just
    • 51:53on bacteria
    • 51:55or just on the
    • 51:57nutrition status may not be.
    • 51:59You are looking the overall
    • 52:01pictures.
    • 52:02And,
    • 52:03using the AI system, I
    • 52:05think it's going to be
    • 52:06discussed,
    • 52:07you may end up with
    • 52:09a surprising,
    • 52:15more surprising results.
    • 52:17That's what we did.
    • 52:19We actually didn't do too
    • 52:20many colon patients.
    • 52:23In our clinic trial,
    • 52:25we can predict that,
    • 52:27we use metabolomics
    • 52:29and cytokine chemokine profile,
    • 52:32just this two parameter ink.
    • 52:35For each patient, we're showing
    • 52:36a deal with more than
    • 52:37one hundred data points.
    • 52:39Well, we have to use
    • 52:41the statistics. This is with
    • 52:47collaboration.
    • 52:48We end up with the
    • 52:49only three parameter can predict
    • 52:51whether the patient that's a
    • 52:54with limit patient,
    • 52:56well, response,
    • 52:57to the chemotherapy
    • 52:59or not.
    • 53:00And,
    • 53:02if in the first two
    • 53:03cycles.
    • 53:04So then just make a
    • 53:06point.
    • 53:07Consider using system biology
    • 53:09working together
    • 53:11with your,
    • 53:14with with with the if
    • 53:15you'd,
    • 53:16with with your
    • 53:18statistician.
    • 53:20They are really powerful
    • 53:22tool to explore those complicated
    • 53:25issues you brought in.
    • 53:28Yeah. Thanks. Very good point.
    • 53:30You know, the challenge sometimes,
    • 53:32I think, with using the
    • 53:32systems approach is, again,
    • 53:34it can,
    • 53:36you're not sure what the
    • 53:37effect of where the variable
    • 53:38is driving the the biological
    • 53:41findings. So that's why we're
    • 53:42trying to keep it simple
    • 53:43and focus on the microbiome,
    • 53:45the diet,
    • 53:46and then
    • 53:47the the cancer cells in
    • 53:48and of itself. But,
    • 53:50but, yeah, I think,
    • 53:51very good points that you
    • 53:52bring up.
    • 53:53Well, I think it's about
    • 53:55time right now. Doctor Khan
    • 53:56and doctor Johnson are available
    • 53:58by email. If you have
    • 53:59questions or you wanna collaborate
    • 54:01or wanna access the seven
    • 54:02hundred and ninety two patient,
    • 54:04databank.
    • 54:06But thank you very much.
    • 54:07It was a wonderful talk.
    • 54:08Thank you both.
    • 54:10Yes.