4.8 Article

Long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase 1 promotes prostate cancer progression by elevation of lipogenesis and fatty acid beta-oxidation

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 40, Issue 10, Pages 1806-1820

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-01667-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01CA172495]
  2. DOD [W81XWH-15-1-0507]

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The study revealed that ACSL1 is highly expressed in prostate tumors, promoting the generation of fatty acyl-CoAs and facilitating cancer cell growth. ACSL1 modulates mitochondrial respiration, beta-oxidation, and ATP production, impacting fatty acid metabolism and prostate cancer progression.
Fatty acid metabolism is essential for the biogenesis of cellular components and ATP production to sustain proliferation of cancer cells. Long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetases (ACSLs), a group of rate-limiting enzymes in fatty acid metabolism, catalyze the bioconversion of exogenous or de novo synthesized fatty acids to their corresponding fatty acyl-CoAs. In this study, systematical analysis of ACSLs levels and the amount of fatty acyl-CoAs illustrated that ACSL1 were significantly associated with the levels of a broad spectrum of fatty acyl-CoAs, and were elevated in human prostate tumors. ACSL1 increased the biosynthesis of fatty acyl-CoAs including C16:0-, C18:0-, C18:1-, and C18:2-CoA, triglycerides and lipid accumulation in cancer cells. Mechanistically, ACSL1 modulated mitochondrial respiration, beta-oxidation, and ATP production through regulation of CPT1 activity. Knockdown of ACSL1 inhibited the cell cycle, and suppressed the proliferation and migration of prostate cancer cells in vitro, and growth of prostate xenograft tumors in vivo. Our study implicates ACSL1 as playing an important role in prostate tumor progression, and provides a therapeutic strategy of targeting fatty acid metabolism for the treatment of prostate cancer.

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