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  4. Colon tumour cell death causes mTOR dependence by paracrine P2X4 stimulation
 
research article

Colon tumour cell death causes mTOR dependence by paracrine P2X4 stimulation

Schmitt, Mark
•
Ceteci, Fatih
•
Gupta, Jalaj
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November 16, 2022
Nature

Solid cancers exhibit a dynamic balance between cell death and proliferation ensuring continuous tumour maintenance and growth(1,2). Increasing evidence links enhanced cancer cell apoptosis to paracrine activation of cells in the tumour microenvironment initiating tissue repair programs that support tumour growth(3,4), yet the direct effects of dying cancer cells on neighbouring tumour epithelia and how this paracrine effect potentially contributes to therapy resistance are unclear. Here we demonstrate that chemotherapy-induced tumour cell death in patient-derived colorectal tumour organoids causes ATP release triggering P2X4 (also known as P2RX4) to mediate an mTOR-dependent pro-survival program in neighbouring cancer cells, which renders surviving tumour epithelia sensitiveto mTOR inhibition. The induced mTOR addiction in persisting epithelial cells is due to elevated production of reactive oxygen species and subsequent increased DNA damage in response to the death of neighbouring cells. Accordingly, inhibition of the P2X4 receptor or direct mTOR blockade prevents induction of S6 phosphorylation and synergizes with chemotherapy to cause massive cell death induced by reactive oxygen species and marked tumour regression that is not seen when individually applied. Conversely, scavenging of reactive oxygen species prevents cancer cells from becoming reliant on mTOR activation. Collectively, our findings show that dying cancer cells establish a new dependency on anti-apoptotic programs in their surviving neighbours, thereby creating an opportunity for combination therapy in P2X4-expressing epithelial tumours.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41586-022-05426-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000884719900009

Author(s)
Schmitt, Mark
Ceteci, Fatih
Gupta, Jalaj
Pesic, Marina
Bottger, Tim W.
Nicolas, Adele M.
Kennel, Kilian B.
Engel, Esther
Schewe, Matthias
Kirisozu, Asude Callak
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Date Issued

2022-11-16

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO

Published in
Nature
Volume

612

Start page

347

End page

353

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

purinergic receptors

•

metastasis

•

inhibition

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPABLASSER  
Available on Infoscience
December 5, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/193045
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