Mitochondrial oxidative stress in cancer-associated fibroblasts drives lactate production, promoting breast cancer tumor growth Understanding the aging and cancer connection

被引:100
作者
Balliet, Renee M. [1 ,2 ]
Capparelli, Claudia [1 ,2 ]
Guido, Carmela [1 ,2 ]
Pestell, Timothy G. [1 ,2 ]
Martinez-Outschoorn, Ubaldo E. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Lin, Zhao [1 ,2 ]
Whitaker-Menezes, Diana [1 ,2 ]
Chiavarina, Barbara [1 ,2 ]
Pestell, Richard G. [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Howell, Anthony [4 ,5 ]
Sotgia, Federica [1 ,2 ,4 ,5 ]
Lisanti, Michael P. [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Jefferson Stem Cell Biol & Regenerat Med Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[2] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Dept Stem Cell Biol & Regenerat Med, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[3] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Dept Med Oncol, Kimmel Canc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[4] Univ Manchester, Manchester Acad Hlth Sci Ctr, Manchester Breast Ctr, Paterson Inst Canc Res,Sch Canc, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
[5] Univ Manchester, Manchester Acad Hlth Sci Ctr, Breakthrough Breast Canc Res Unit, Paterson Inst Canc Res,Sch Canc, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
caveolin-1; mitochondria; oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS); electron transport; respiratory chain; reverse Warburg effect; aerobic glycolysis; hydrogen peroxide; lactate; cancer metabolism; TFAM; aging; cancer associated fibroblasts; STROMAL CAVEOLIN-1; HYDROGEN-PEROXIDE; CELL METABOLISM; LIFE-SPAN; MICROENVIRONMENT; EXPRESSION; AUTOPHAGY; DNA; METASTASIS; PROTEIN;
D O I
10.4161/cc.10.23.18254
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Increasing chronological age is the most significant risk factor for cancer. Recently, we proposed a new paradigm for understanding the role of the aging and the tumor microenvironment in cancer onset. In this model, cancer cells induce oxidative stress in adjacent stromal fibroblasts. This, in turn, causes several changes in the phenotype of the fibroblast including mitochondrial dysfunction, hydrogen peroxide production and aerobic glycolysis, resulting in high levels of L-lactate production. L-lactate is then transferred from these glycolytic fibroblasts to adjacent epithelial cancer cells and used as "fuel" for oxidative mitochondrial metabolism. Here, we created a new pre-clinical model system to directly test this hypothesis experimentally. To synthetically generate glycolytic fibroblasts, we genetically-induced mitochondrial dysfunction by knocking down TFAM using an sh-RNA approach. TFAM is mitochondrial transcription factor A, which is important in functionally maintaining the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Interestingly, TFAM-deficient fibroblasts showed evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress, with the loss of certain mitochondrial respiratory chain components, and the over-production of hydrogen peroxide and L-lactate. Thus, TFAM-deficient fibroblasts underwent metabolic reprogramming towards aerobic glycolysis. Most importantly, TFAM-deficient fibroblasts significantly promoted tumor growth, as assayed using a human breast cancer (MDA-MB-231) xenograft model. These increases in glycolytic fibroblast driven tumor growth were independent of tumor angiogenesis. Mechanistically, TFAM-deficient fibroblasts increased the mitochondrial activity of adjacent epithelial cancer cells in a co-culture system, as seen using MitoTracker. Finally, TFAM-deficient fibroblasts also showed a loss of caveolin-1 (Cav-1), a known breast cancer stromal biomarker. Loss of stromal fibroblast Cav-1 is associated with early tumor recurrence, metastasis and treatment failure, resulting in poor clinical outcome in breast cancer patients. Thus, this new experimental model system, employing glycolytic fibroblasts, may be highly clinically relevant. These studies also have implications for understanding the role of hydrogen peroxide production in oxidative damage and "host cell aging," in providing a permissive metabolic microenvironment for promoting and sustaining tumor growth.
引用
收藏
页码:4065 / 4073
页数:9
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