4.6 Review

The Mevalonate Pathway, a Metabolic Target in Cancer Therapy

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.626971

Keywords

mevalonate; cholesterol; oxysterols; isoprenoids; sterol regulatory element binding protein; cancer; statins

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MCIU) [SAF2015-65113-C2-2]
  2. European Regional Development Fund-European Social Fund, SODECAN (Canary Islands Government) [ET/15020]
  3. FIISC
  4. Alfredo Martin-Reyes Foundation (Arehucas S.A.)
  5. MCIU-FPU [16/00233]
  6. ULPGC
  7. post-doctoral program Juan de la Cierva (MCIU)

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Cancer cells exhibit metabolic reprogramming for energy and signaling, with lipid metabolism playing a key role in cancer progression and drug resistance. Targeting the mevalonate (MVA) biosynthetic pathway may offer a potential strategy to improve therapeutic window in cancer treatment.
A hallmark of cancer cells includes a metabolic reprograming that provides energy, the essential building blocks, and signaling required to maintain survival, rapid growth, metastasis, and drug resistance of many cancers. The influence of tumor microenviroment on cancer cells also results an essential driving force for cancer progression and drug resistance. Lipid-related enzymes, lipid-derived metabolites and/or signaling pathways linked to critical regulators of lipid metabolism can influence gene expression and chromatin remodeling, cellular differentiation, stress response pathways, or tumor microenviroment, and, collectively, drive tumor development. Reprograming of lipid metabolism includes a deregulated activity of mevalonate (MVA)/cholesterol biosynthetic pathway in specific cancer cells which, in comparison with normal cell counterparts, are dependent of the continuous availability of MVA/cholesterol-derived metabolites (i.e., sterols and non-sterol intermediates) for tumor development. Accordingly, there are increasing amount of data, from preclinical and epidemiological studies, that support an inverse association between the use of statins, potent inhibitors of MVA biosynthetic pathway, and mortality rate in specific cancers (e.g., colon, prostate, liver, breast, hematological malignances). In contrast, despite the tolerance and therapeutic efficacy shown by statins in cardiovascular disease, cancer treatment demands the use of relatively high doses of single statins for a prolonged period, thereby limiting this therapeutic strategy due to adverse effects. Clinically relevant, synergistic effects of tolerable doses of statins with conventional chemotherapy might enhance efficacy with lower doses of each drug and, probably, reduce adverse effects and resistance. In spite of that, clinical trials to identify combinatory therapies that improve therapeutic window are still a challenge. In the present review, we revisit molecular evidences showing that deregulated activity of MVA biosynthetic pathway has an essential role in oncogenesis and drug resistance, and the potential use of MVA pathway inhibitors to improve therapeutic window in cancer.

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