4.8 Article

Tissue Metabolomics of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Tumor Energy Metabolism and the Role of Transcriptomic Classification

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 1, Pages 229-238

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hep.26350

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U19 AI067773-07/08]
  2. Bernerische und Schweizerische Krebsliga, Sasella Foundation
  3. Hassan Badawi Foundation Against Liver Cancer
  4. INCa and Association pour la recherche contre le Cancer, ARC
  5. Reseau national CRB Foie and BioIntelligence (OSEO)

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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the commonest causes of death from cancer. A plethora of metabolomic investigations of HCC have yielded molecules in biofluids that are both up-and down-regulated but no real consensus has emerged regarding exploitable biomarkers for early detection of HCC. We report here a different approach, a combined transcriptomics and metabolomics study of energy metabolism in HCC. A panel of 31 pairs of HCC tumors and corresponding nontumor liver tissues from the same patients was investigated by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS)-based metabolomics. HCC was characterized by similar to 2-fold depletion of glucose, glycerol 3-and 2-phosphate, malate, alanine, myo-inositol, and linoleic acid. Data are consistent with a metabolic remodeling involving a 4-fold increase in glycolysis over mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. A second panel of 59 HCC that had been typed by transcriptomics and classified in G1 to G6 subgroups was also subjected to GCMS tissue metabolomics. No differences in glucose, lactate, alanine, glycerol 3-phosphate, malate, myo-inositol, or stearic acid tissue concentrations were found, suggesting that the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway activated by CTNNB1 mutation in subgroups G5 and G6 did not exhibit specific metabolic remodeling. However, subgroup G1 had markedly reduced tissue concentrations of 1-stearoylglycerol, 1-palmitoylglycerol, and palmitic acid, suggesting that the high serum alpha-fetoprotein phenotype of G1, associated with the known overexpression of lipid catabolic enzymes, could be detected through metabolomics as increased lipid catabolism. Conclusion: Tissue metabolomics yielded precise biochemical information regarding HCC tumor metabolic remodeling from mitochondrial oxidation to aerobic glycolysis and the impact of molecular subtypes on this process.

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