4.4 Article

Autophagy facilitates glycolysis during Ras-mediated oncogenic transformation

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 165-178

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E10-06-0500

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1CA126792, RO1 CA130819]
  2. University of California, San Francisco
  3. Culpeper Medical Scholar Award
  4. California Tobacco-Related Diseases Research Program [18XT-0106]

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The protumorigenic functions for autophagy are largely attributed to its ability to promote cancer cell survival in response to diverse stresses. Here we demonstrate an unexpected connection between autophagy and glucose metabolism that facilitates adhesion-independent transformation driven by a strong oncogenic insult-mutationally active Ras. In cells ectopically expressing oncogenic H-Ras as well as human cancer cell lines harboring endogenous K-Ras mutations, autophagy is induced following extracellular matrix detachment. Inhibiting autophagy due to the genetic deletion or RNA interference-mediated depletion of multiple autophagy regulators attenuates Ras-mediated adhesion-independent transformation and proliferation as well as reduces glycolytic capacity. Furthermore, in contrast to autophagy-competent cells, both proliferation and transformation in autophagy-deficient cells expressing oncogenic Ras are insensitive to reductions in glucose availability. Overall, increased glycolysis in autophagy-competent cells facilitates Ras-mediated adhesion-independent transformation, suggesting a unique mechanism by which autophagy may promote Ras-driven tumor growth in specific metabolic contexts.

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