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Targeting Tumor Mitochondrial Metabolism Overcomes Resistance to Antiangiogenics
Author(s) -
Paloma Navarro,
María José Sánchez Bueno,
Ivana Zagorac,
Tamara Mondejar,
J. M. Sanchez,
Silvana Mourón,
Javier Muñoz,
Gonzalo GómezLópez,
Veronica Jimenez-Renard,
Francisca Mulero,
Navdeep S. Chandel,
Miguel QuintelaFandino
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.05.052
Subject(s) - downregulation and upregulation , phenformin , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , glycolysis , ampk , protein kinase b , cancer research , synthetic lethality , anaerobic glycolysis , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , transcriptome , beta oxidation , hypoxia (environmental) , chemistry , metabolism , biochemistry , signal transduction , phosphorylation , protein kinase a , dna repair , endocrinology , gene , insulin , gene expression , organic chemistry , metformin , oxygen
Epithelial malignancies are effectively treated by antiangiogenics; however, acquired resistance is a major problem in cancer therapeutics. Epithelial tumors commonly have mutations in the MAPK/Pi3K-AKT pathways, which leads to high-rate aerobic glycolysis. Here, we show how multikinase inhibitor antiangiogenics (TKIs) induce hypoxia correction in spontaneous breast and lung tumor models. When this happens, the tumors downregulate glycolysis and switch to long-term reliance on mitochondrial respiration. A transcriptomic, metabolomic, and phosphoproteomic study revealed that this metabolic switch is mediated by downregulation of HIF1α and AKT and upregulation of AMPK, allowing uptake and degradation of fatty acids and ketone bodies. The switch renders mitochondrial respiration necessary for tumor survival. Agents like phenformin or ME344 induce synergistic tumor control when combined with TKIs, leading to metabolic synthetic lethality. Our study uncovers mechanistic insights in the process of tumor resistance to TKIs and may have clinical applicability.

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