4.6 Article

Thyroid Hormone Enhances Angiogenesis and the Warburg Effect in Squamous Cell Carcinomas

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13112743

Keywords

thyroid hormones; deiodinases; angiogenesis; squamous cell carcinoma

Categories

Funding

  1. AIRC Foundation [13065]
  2. European Research Council under the European Union [STARS-639548]
  3. grant PRIN from MIUR [2017WNKSLR]
  4. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [R01DK044128]

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Cancer cells rewire their metabolism to promote growth and survival, with thyroid hormone playing a role in tumor progression. Attenuation of TH signal may provide a therapeutic approach against tumor angiogenesis and progression. Overall, a regulatory axis involving TH-VEGF-A-HIF1 alpha leads to enhanced angiogenesis and glycolytic flux in SCC, making it a potential target for therapy.
Simple Summary Cancer cells rewire their metabolism to promote growth, survival, proliferation, and long-term maintenance. Aerobic glycolysis is a prominent trait of many cancers; contextually, glutamine addiction, enhanced glucose uptake and aerobic glycolysis sustain the metabolic needs of rapidly proliferating cancer cells. Thyroid hormone (TH) is a positive regulator of tumor progression and metastatic conversion of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Accordingly, overexpression of the TH activating enzyme, D2, is associated with metastatic SCC. The aim of our study was to assess the ability of TH and its activating enzyme in promoting key tracts of cancer progression such as angiogenesis, response to hypoxia and metabolic adaptation. By performing in vivo and in vitro studies, we demonstrate that TH induces VEGF-A in cancer cells and fosters aerobic glycolysis inducing pro-glycolytic mediators, thus implying that TH signal attenuation represents a therapeutic tool to contrast tumor angiogenesis and tumor progression. Cancer angiogenesis is required to support energetic demand and metabolic stress, particularly during conditions of hypoxia. Coupled to neo-vasculogenesis, cancer cells rewire metabolic programs to sustain growth, survival and long-term maintenance. Thyroid hormone (TH) signaling regulates growth and differentiation in a variety of cell types and tissues, thus modulating hyper proliferative processes such as cancer. Herein, we report that TH coordinates a global program of metabolic reprogramming and induces angiogenesis through up-regulation of the VEGF-A gene, which results in the enhanced proliferation of tumor endothelial cells. In vivo conditional depletion of the TH activating enzyme in a mouse model of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) reduces the concentration of TH in the tumoral cells and results in impaired VEGF-A production and attenuated angiogenesis. In addition, we found that TH induces the expression of the glycolytic genes and fosters lactate production, which are key traits of the Warburg effect. Taken together, our results reveal a TH-VEGF-A-HIF1 alpha regulatory axis leading to enhanced angiogenesis and glycolytic flux, which may represent a target for SCC therapy.

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