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Cancer cells metabolically "fertilize" the tumor microenvironment with hydrogen peroxide, driving the Warburg effect Implications for PET imaging of human tumors
被引:229
作者:
Martinez-Outschoorn, Ubaldo E.
[1
,2
,3
,4
]
Lin, Zhao
[1
,2
,3
]
Trimmer, Casey
[1
,2
,3
]
Flomenberg, Neal
[1
,4
]
Wang, Chenguang
[1
,2
,3
]
Pavlides, Stephanos
[1
,2
,3
]
Pestell, Richard G.
[1
,2
,3
]
Howell, Anthony
[5
,6
]
Sotgia, Federica
[1
,2
,3
,5
,6
]
Lisanti, Michael P.
[1
,2
,3
,4
,5
,6
]
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, Kimmel Canc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[3] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Dept Canc Biol, Kimmel Canc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[4] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Dept Med Oncol, Kimmel Canc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA
[5] Univ Manchester, Manchester Breast Ctr, Manchester, Lancs, England
[6] Univ Manchester, Paterson Inst Canc Res, Breakthrough Breast Canc Res Unit, Sch Canc Enabling Sci & Technol,Manchester Acad H, Manchester, Lancs, England
来源:
基金:
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词:
tumor stroma;
microenvironment;
hydrogen peroxide;
aerobic glycolysis;
mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation;
glucose uptake;
oxidative stress;
reactive oxygen species (ROS);
cancer associated fibroblasts;
PET imaging;
the field effect;
caveolin-1;
POSITRON-EMISSION-TOMOGRAPHY;
KAPPA-B ACTIVATION;
BREAST-CANCER;
OXIDATIVE STRESS;
STROMAL CAVEOLIN-1;
BLOOD-FLOW;
PULMONARY METASTASIS;
GENOMIC INSTABILITY;
ALLOGRAFT-REJECTION;
LIPID-PEROXIDATION;
D O I:
10.4161/cc.10.15.16585
中图分类号:
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号:
071009 ;
090102 ;
摘要:
Previously, we proposed that cancer cells behave as metabolic parasites, as they use targeted oxidative stress as a "weapon" to extract recycled nutrients from adjacent stromal cells. Oxidative stress in cancer-associated fibroblasts triggers autophagy and mitophagy, resulting in compartmentalized cellular catabolism, loss of mitochondrial function, and the onset of aerobic glycolysis, in the tumor stroma. As such, cancer-associated fibroblasts produce high-energy nutrients (such as lactate and ketones) that fuel mitochondrial biogenesis and oxidative metabolism in cancer cells. We have termed this new energy-transfer mechanism the "Reverse Warburg Effect." To further test the validity of this hypothesis, here we used an in vitro MCF7-fibroblast co-culture system and quantitatively measured a variety of metabolic parameters by FACS analysis (analogous to laser-capture micro-dissection). Mitochondrial activity, glucose uptake and ROS production were measured with highly-sensitive fluorescent probes (MitoTracker, NBD-2-deoxy-glucose and DCF-DA). Interestingly, using this approach, we directly show that cancer cells initially secrete hydrogen peroxide that then triggers oxidative stress in neighboring fibroblasts. Thus, oxidative stress is contagious (spreads like a virus) and is propagated laterally and vectorially from cancer cells to adjacent fibroblasts. Experimentally, we show that oxidative stress in cancer-associated fibroblasts quantitatively reduces mitochondrial activity and increases glucose uptake, as the fibroblasts become more dependent on aerobic glycolysis. Conversely, co-cultured cancer cells show significant increases in mitochondrial activity and corresponding reductions in both glucose uptake and GLUT1 expression. Pretreatment of co-cultures with extracellular catalase (an anti-oxidant enzyme that detoxifies hydrogen peroxide) blocks the onset of oxidative stress and potently induces the death of cancer cells, likely via starvation. Given that cancer-associated fibroblasts show the largest increases in glucose uptake, we suggest that PET imaging of human tumors, with Fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (F-2-DG), may be specifically detecting the tumor stroma, rather than epithelial cancer cells.
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页码:2504 / 2520
页数:17
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