4.3 Article

Metabolic Recycling Enhances Proliferation in MYC-Transformed Lymphoma B Cells

Journal

ADVANCED BIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adbi.202200233

Keywords

C-13(6)-glucose labeling; cancer metabolism; glucose metabolism; mass spectrometry; metabolic recycling; metabolomics; MYC-transformed lymphoma B cells

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The release of metabolic materials from dead cancer cells post-therapy can promote the growth of surviving cancer cells. The surviving cancer cells take up these metabolites and enhance multiple vital metabolic processes, resulting in significant growth. This phenomenon is observed only in oncogenic cells, providing opportunities for intervention in cancer cell growth.
Relapses negatively impact cancer patient survival due to the tumorigenesis ability of surviving cancer cells post-therapy. Efforts are needed to better understand and combat this problem. This study hypothesized that dead cell debris post-radiation therapy creates an advantageous microenvironment rich in metabolic materials promoting the growth of remaining live cancer cells. In this study, live cancer cells are co-cultured with dead cancer cells eradicated by UV radiation to mimic a post-therapy environment. Isotopic labeling metabolomics is used to investigate the metabolic behavior of cancer cells grown in a post-radiation-therapy environment. It is found that post-UV-eradicated dead cancer cells serve as nutritional sources of off-the-shelf and precursor metabolites for surviving cancer cells. The surviving cancer cells then take up these metabolites, integrate and upregulate multiple vital metabolic processes, thereby significantly increasing growth in vitro and probably in vivo beyond their intrinsic fast-growing characteristics. Importantly, this active metabolite uptake behavior is only observed in oncogenic but not in non-oncogenic cells, presenting opportunities for therapeutic approaches to interrupt the active uptake process of oncogenic cells without affecting normal cells. The process by which living cancer cells re-use vital metabolites released by dead cancer cells post-therapy is coined in this study as metabolic recycling of oncogenic cells.

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