4.6 Article

Isomeric lipid signatures reveal compartmentalized fatty acid metabolism in cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 63, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jlr.2022.100223

Keywords

FA; transport; lipolysis and FA metabolism; lipase; phospholipid; metabolism; phospholipids; phosphatidylcholine; lipid isomers; stable-isotope tracing; imaging MS; ozone-induced dissociation

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council, Australia through the Discovery Program [DP190101486]
  2. Linkage Program [LP180100238]
  3. Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia, Australia
  4. Australian Government Department of Health, Australia through a Movember Revolutionary Team Award
  5. Cancer Program Initiative for Metabolism (Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
  6. Dutch Province of Limburg
  7. Australian Government through award of an RTP scholarship
  8. Interreg V EMR
  9. Netherlands Ministry of Economic Affairs, Netherlands [EMR23]
  10. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship Scheme [FT190100082]
  11. Australian Research Council [LP180100238, FT190100082] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The demands of cellular energy and biomass in cancer cells affect the metabolic fate of extracellular fatty acids (FAs) and de novo synthesized FAs. This study reveals that FAs from different sources have distinct metabolic fates, which can induce structural changes in cellular lipids and alter signaling behaviors. These findings provide new insights into the complex dynamics of FA metabolism in cancer.
The cellular energy and biomass demands of cancer drive a complex dynamic between uptake of extracellular FAs and their de novo synthesis. Given that oxidation of de novo synthesized FAs for energy would result in net-energy loss, there is an implication that FAs from these two sources must have distinct metabolic fates; however, hitherto, all FAs have been considered part of a common pool. To probe potential metabolic partitioning of cellular FAs, cancer cells were supplemented with stable isotope-labeled FAs. Structural analysis of the resulting glycerophospholipids revealed that labeled FAs from uptake were largely incorporated to canonical (sn-) positions on the glycerol backbone. Surprisingly, labeled FA uptake also disrupted canonical isomer patterns of the unlabeled lipidome and induced repartitioning of n-3 and n-6 PUFAs into glycerophospholipid classes. These structural changes support the existence of differences in the metabolic fates of FAs derived from uptake or de novo sources and demonstrate unique signaling and remodeling behaviors usually hidden from conventional lipidomics.

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