12 research outputs found
Metabolic Potential of Cancer Cells in Context of the Metastatic Cascade.
peer reviewedThe metastatic cascade is a highly plastic and dynamic process dominated by cellular heterogeneity and varying metabolic requirements. During this cascade, the three major metabolic pillars, namely biosynthesis, RedOx balance, and bioenergetics, have variable importance. Biosynthesis has superior significance during the proliferation-dominated steps of primary tumour growth and secondary macrometastasis formation and only minor relevance during the growth-independent processes of invasion and dissemination. Consequently, RedOx homeostasis and bioenergetics emerge as conceivable metabolic key determinants in cancer cells that disseminate from the primary tumour. Within this review, we summarise our current understanding on how cancer cells adjust their metabolism in the context of different microenvironments along the metastatic cascade. With the example of one-carbon metabolism, we establish a conceptual view on how the same metabolic pathway can be exploited in different ways depending on the current cellular needs during metastatic progression
A Bioorthogonal Click Chemistry Toolbox for Targeted Synthesis of Branched and Well-Defined Protein-Protein Conjugates
A highly efficient technology for protein
functionalization with commonly used bioorthogonal motifs for Diels-Alder
cycloaddition with inverse electron demand (DAinv). With the aim of
precisely generating branched protein chimeras, we systematically assessed the
reactivity, stability and side product formation of various bioorthogonal
chemistries directly at the protein level. We demonstrate the efficiency and
versatility of our conjugation platform using different functional proteins and
the therapeutic antibody trastuzumab. This technology enables fast and routine
access to tailored and hitherto inaccessible protein chimeras useful for a
variety of scientific disciplines
Ascorbate kills breast cancer cells by rewiring metabolism via redox imbalance and energy crisis
The idea to use megadoses of ascorbate (vitamin C) for cancer treatment has recently been revived. Despite clear efficacy in animal experimentation, our understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of this treatment is still limited and suggests a combined oxidative and metabolic mechanism behind the selective cytotoxicity of ascorbate towards cancerous cells. To gain more insight into the cellular effects of high doses of ascorbate, we performed a detailed analysis of metabolic changes and cell survival of both luminal and basal-like breast cancer cells treated with ascorbate and revealed a distinctive metabolic shift virtually reversing the Warburg effect and triggering a severe disruption of redox homeostasis. High doses of ascorbate were cytotoxic against MCF7 and MDA-MB231 cells representing luminal and basal-like breast cancer phenotypes. Cell death was dependent on ascorbate-induced oxidative stress and accumulation of ROS, DNA damage, and depletion of essential intracellular co-factors including NAD+/NADH, associated with a multifaceted metabolic rewiring. This included a sharp disruption of glycolysis at the triose phosphate level, a rapid drop in ATP levels, and redirection of metabolites toward lipid droplet accumulation and increased metabolites and enzymatic activity in the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). High doses of ascorbate also inhibited the TCA cycle and increased oxygen consumption. Together the severe disruptions of the intracellular metabolic homeostasis on multiple levels "redox crisis and energetic catastrophe" consequently trigger a rapid irreversible cell death
Mitochondria preserve an autarkic one-carbon cycle to confer growth-independent cancer cell migration and metastasis
Metastasis is the most common cause of death in cancer patients. Canonical drugs target mainly the proliferative capacity of cancer cells, which leaves slow-proliferating, persistent cancer cells unaffected. Metabolic determinants that contribute to growth-independent functions are still poorly understood. Here we show that antifolate treatment results in an uncoupled and autarkic mitochondrial one-carbon (1C) metabolism during cytosolic 1C metabolism impairment. Interestingly, antifolate dependent growth-arrest does not correlate with decreased migration capacity. Therefore, using methotrexate as a tool compound allows us to disentangle proliferation and migration to profile the metabolic phenotype of migrating cells. We observe that increased serine de novo synthesis (SSP) supports mitochondrial serine catabolism and inhibition of SSP using the competitive PHGDH-inhibitor BI-4916 reduces cancer cell migration. Furthermore, we show that sole inhibition of mitochondrial serine catabolism does not affect primary breast tumor growth but strongly inhibits pulmonary metastasis. We conclude that mitochondrial 1C metabolism, despite being dispensable for proliferative capacities, confers an advantage to cancer cells by supporting their motility potential
Mitochondria preserve an autarkic one-carbon cycle to confer growth-independent cancer cell migration and metastasis
Metastasis is the most common cause of death in cancer patients. Canonical drugs target mainly the proliferative capacity of cancer cells, which leaves slow-proliferating, persistent cancer cells unaffected. Metabolic determinants that contribute to growth-independent functions are still poorly understood. Here we show that antifolate treatment results in an uncoupled and autarkic mitochondrial one-carbon (1C) metabolism during cytosolic 1C metabolism impairment. Interestingly, antifolate dependent growth-arrest does not correlate with decreased migration capacity. Therefore, using methotrexate as a tool compound allows us to disentangle proliferation and migration to profile the metabolic phenotype of migrating cells. We observe that increased serine de novo synthesis (SSP) supports mitochondrial serine catabolism and inhibition of SSP using the competitive PHGDH-inhibitor BI-4916 reduces cancer cell migration. Furthermore, we show that sole inhibition of mitochondrial serine catabolism does not affect primary breast tumor growth but strongly inhibits pulmonary metastasis. We conclude that mitochondrial 1C metabolism, despite being dispensable for proliferative capacities, confers an advantage to cancer cells by supporting their motility potential
Ascorbate kills breast cancer cells by rewiring metabolism via redox imbalance and energy crisis
The idea to use megadoses of ascorbate (vitamin C) for cancer treatment has recently been revived. Despite clear efficacy in animal experimentation, our understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of this treatment is still limited and suggests a combined oxidative and metabolic mechanism behind the selective cytotoxicity of ascorbate towards cancerous cells. To gain more insight into the cellular effects of high doses of ascorbate, we performed a detailed analysis of metabolic changes and cell survival of both luminal and basal-like breast cancer cells treated with ascorbate and revealed a distinctive metabolic shift virtually reversing the Warburg effect and triggering a severe disruption of redox homeostasis. High doses of ascorbate were cytotoxic against MCF7 and MDA-MB231 cells representing luminal and basal-like breast cancer phenotypes. Cell death was dependent on ascorbate-induced oxidative stress and accumulation of ROS, DNA damage, and depletion of essential intracellular co-factors including NAD+/NADH, associated with a multifaceted metabolic rewiring. This included a sharp disruption of glycolysis at the triose phosphate level, a rapid drop in ATP levels, and redirection of metabolites toward lipid droplet accumulation and increased metabolites and enzymatic activity in the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). High doses of ascorbate also inhibited the TCA cycle and increased oxygen consumption. Together the severe disruptions of the intracellular metabolic homeostasis on multiple levels "redox crisis and energetic catastrophe" consequently trigger a rapid irreversible cell death
Serine metabolism is crucial for cGAS-STING signaling and viral defense control in the gut
Summary: Inflammatory bowel diseases are characterized by the chronic relapsing inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. While the molecular causality between endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and intestinal inflammation is widely accepted, the metabolic consequences of chronic ER stress on the pathophysiology of IBD remain unclear. By using in vitro, in vivo models, and patient datasets, we identified a distinct polarization of the mitochondrial one-carbon metabolism and a fine-tuning of the amino acid uptake in intestinal epithelial cells tailored to support GSH and NADPH metabolism upon ER stress. This metabolic phenotype strongly correlates with IBD severity and therapy response. Mechanistically, we uncover that both chronic ER stress and serine limitation disrupt cGAS-STING signaling, impairing the epithelial response against viral and bacterial infection and fueling experimental enteritis. Consequently, the antioxidant treatment restores STING function and virus control. Collectively, our data highlight the importance of serine metabolism to allow proper cGAS-STING signaling and innate immune responses upon gut inflammation
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CNSC-15. MITOCHONDRIA TRANSFER VIA GLIOMA-ASTROCYTE NETWORK MICROTUBES REPROGRAMS TUMOR CELLS FOR ENHANCED TUMORIGENICITY
Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) interaction with neural cells is critical to its pathobiology. Emerging evidence suggests that GBM cells form an interconnected network with astrocytes, facilitating tumor persistence. Given reports of intercellular transfer of mitochondria in ischemic stroke and other pathologic disease states outside the CNS, we hypothesized that this network facilitates mitochondria transfer from astrocytes to GBM with protumorigenic sequelae. Employing transgenic mice and intracranial viral vector transductions in rats, we found that mitochondria transfer from the TME to GBM occurs in intracranial mouse and patient-derived xenograft models (in nude rats) of GBM. Mitochondria transfer from bone marrow-derived immune cells was minimal in bone marrow chimera mouse models of orthotopic GBM, suggesting that neural cells were the primary mitochondria donors. We confirmed this in vitro, where mouse astrocytes were the major mitochondria donors, followed by microglia and to a much smaller extent bone marrow-derived macrophages. Immortalized human astrocytes transduced with mitochondria-localized mCherry (mito-mCherry) also transferred their mitochondria to numerous patient-derived glioma stem cell (GSC) models at rates of ~5-20%, assessed by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Mitochondria were visualized along intercellular actin bridges, structurally resembling tumor microtubes. Blocking actin polymerization or knocking down GAP43 (previously linked to microtube formation) decreased mitochondria transfer from astrocytes to GBM in vitro. Functionally, sorted mito-mCherry+ patient-derived GSCs displayed higher mitochondrial respiration, metabolomic reprogramming and proliferation-promoting phospho-signaling. Mito-mCherry+ GBM cells were more likely to be in the proliferative G2/M phases of the cell cycle, and when sorted from co-cultures had high self-renewal (in vitro) and tumor-initiating capacity (in vivo xenograft mouse model). In ongoing work, we are investigating the role of retrograde GBM to astrocyte transfer of mitochondria by dual-color labeling of the organelle, as well as further delineating the protein machinery involved in this fundamental protumorigenic process, with the goal of identifying novel therapeutic targets
GAP43-dependent mitochondria transfer from astrocytes enhances glioblastoma tumorigenicity
The transfer of intact mitochondria between heterogeneous cell types has been confirmed in various settings, including cancer. However, the functional implications of mitochondria transfer on tumor biology are poorly understood. Here we show that mitochondria transfer is a prevalent phenomenon in glioblastoma (GBM), the most frequent and malignant primary brain tumor. We identified horizontal mitochondria transfer from astrocytes as a mechanism that enhances tumorigenesis in GBM. This transfer is dependent on network-forming intercellular connections between GBM cells and astrocytes, which are facilitated by growth-associated protein 43 (GAP43), a protein involved in neuron axon regeneration and astrocyte reactivity. The acquisition of astrocyte mitochondria drives an increase in mitochondrial respiration and upregulation of metabolic pathways linked to proliferation and tumorigenicity. Functionally, uptake of astrocyte mitochondria promotes cell cycle progression to proliferative G2/M phases and enhances self-renewal and tumorigenicity of GBM. Collectively, our findings reveal a host-tumor interaction that drives proliferation and self-renewal of cancer cells, providing opportunities for therapeutic development