Metabolic dependencies of metastasis-initiating cells in female breast cancer
Understanding the mechanisms that enable cancer cells to metastasize is essential in preventing cancer progression. Here we examine the metabolic adaptations of metastasis-initiating cells (MICs) in female breast cancer and how those shape their metastatic phenotype. We find that endogenous MICs depend on the oxidative tricarboxylic acid cycle and fatty acid usage. Sorting tumor cells based upon solely mitochondrial membrane potential or lipid storage is sufficient at identifying MICs. We further identify that mitochondrially-generated citrate is exported to the cytoplasm to yield acetyl-CoA, and this is crucial to maintaining heightened levels of H3K27ac in MICs. Blocking acetyl-CoA generating pathways or H3K27ac-specific epigenetic writers and readers reduces expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal related genes, MIC frequency, and metastatic potential. Exogenous supplementation of a short chain carboxylic acid, acetate, increases MIC frequency and metastasis. In patient cohorts, we observe that higher expression of oxidative phosphorylation related genes is associated with reduced distant relapse-free survival. These data demonstrate that MICs specifically and precisely alter their metabolism to efficiently colonize distant organs.|Understanding the mechanisms associated with cancer metastasis may help control cancer progression. Here the authors investigate the metabolism of metastasis initiating cells in breast cancer and show that their metastatic ability relies on fatty acid oxidation and the oxidative tricarboxylic acid cycle, which in turn regulates acetyl-CoA generation and the acetylation of histones on EMT related genes.
document.pdf
Publisher's version
openaccess
CC BY
2.92 MB
Adobe PDF
0fcc00ecf9ad395d52c638aa778666da