TY - JOUR
T1 - Mitochondrial OXPHOS Induced by RB1 Deficiency in Breast Cancer
T2 - Implications for Anabolic Metabolism, Stemness, and Metastasis
AU - Zacksenhaus, Eldad
AU - Shrestha, Mariusz
AU - Liu, Jeff C.
AU - Vorobieva, Ioulia
AU - Chung, Philip E.D.
AU - Ju, Young Jun
AU - Nir, Uri
AU - Jiang, Zhe
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2017
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - A switch from catabolic to anabolic metabolism, a major hallmark of cancer, enables rapid cell duplication, and is driven by multiple oncogenic alterations, including PIK3CA mutation, MYC amplification, and TP53 loss. However, tumor growth requires active mitochondrial function and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Recently, loss of the retinoblastoma (RB1) tumor suppressor in breast cancer was shown to induce mitochondrial protein translation (MPT) and OXPHOS. Here, we discuss how increased OXPHOS can enhance anabolic metabolism and cell proliferation, as well as cancer stemness and metastasis. Mitochondrial STAT3, FER/FER-T, and CHCHD2 are also implicated in OXPHOS. We propose that RB1 loss represents a prototypic oncogenic alteration that promotes OXPHOS, that aggressive tumors acquire lethal combinations of oncogenes and tumor suppressors that stimulate anabolism versus OXPHOS, and that targeting both metabolic pathways would be therapeutic. The impact of RB1 loss on MPT and OXPHOS is context dependent; RB1 loss represses MPT and OXPHOS in normal cells, but stimulates mitochondrial function in aggressive tumors. RB1 loss may represent a new class of oncogenic events, also including mitochondrial STAT3, FER/FER-T and CHCHD2, that promote mitochondrial function and OXPHOS and possibly tumor stemness and dissemination. RB1 deficiency increases sensitivity to inhibitors of mitochondrial protein translation (MPT) and OXPHOS.
AB - A switch from catabolic to anabolic metabolism, a major hallmark of cancer, enables rapid cell duplication, and is driven by multiple oncogenic alterations, including PIK3CA mutation, MYC amplification, and TP53 loss. However, tumor growth requires active mitochondrial function and oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Recently, loss of the retinoblastoma (RB1) tumor suppressor in breast cancer was shown to induce mitochondrial protein translation (MPT) and OXPHOS. Here, we discuss how increased OXPHOS can enhance anabolic metabolism and cell proliferation, as well as cancer stemness and metastasis. Mitochondrial STAT3, FER/FER-T, and CHCHD2 are also implicated in OXPHOS. We propose that RB1 loss represents a prototypic oncogenic alteration that promotes OXPHOS, that aggressive tumors acquire lethal combinations of oncogenes and tumor suppressors that stimulate anabolism versus OXPHOS, and that targeting both metabolic pathways would be therapeutic. The impact of RB1 loss on MPT and OXPHOS is context dependent; RB1 loss represses MPT and OXPHOS in normal cells, but stimulates mitochondrial function in aggressive tumors. RB1 loss may represent a new class of oncogenic events, also including mitochondrial STAT3, FER/FER-T and CHCHD2, that promote mitochondrial function and OXPHOS and possibly tumor stemness and dissemination. RB1 deficiency increases sensitivity to inhibitors of mitochondrial protein translation (MPT) and OXPHOS.
KW - anabolic metabolism
KW - breast cancer
KW - cancer stem cell
KW - glycolysis
KW - metastasis
KW - mitochondrial protein translation
KW - oxidative phosphorylation
KW - tumor suppressor RB1
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85031677476&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.trecan.2017.09.002
DO - 10.1016/j.trecan.2017.09.002
M3 - مقالة مرجعية
C2 - 29120753
SN - 2405-8033
VL - 3
SP - 768
EP - 779
JO - TRENDS IN CANCER
JF - TRENDS IN CANCER
IS - 11
ER -