4.5 Review

When fats commit crimes: fatty acid metabolism, cancer stemness and therapeutic resistance

Journal

CANCER COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 38, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1186/s40880-018-0317-9

Keywords

Fatty acid synthesis; Fatty acid oxidation; Fatty acid metabolism; Lipogenic phenotype; Cancer stem cells; Tumor-initiating cells; Cancer cell plasticity; Therapeutic resistance; Drug-tolerant persisters

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01DE026304, R01CA220693]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, R.O.C

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The role of fatty acid metabolism, including both anabolic and catabolic reactions in cancer has gained increasing attention in recent years. Many studies have shown that aberrant expression of the genes involved in fatty acid synthesis or fatty acid oxidation correlate with malignant phenotypes including metastasis, therapeutic resistance and relapse. Such phenotypes are also strongly associated with the presence of a small percentage of unique cells among the total tumor cell population. This distinct group of cells may have the ability to self-renew and propagate or may be able to develop resistance to cancer therapies independent of genetic alterations. Therefore, these cells are referred to as cancer stem cells/tumor-initiating cells/drug-tolerant persisters, which are often refractory to cancer treatment and difficult to target. Moreover, interconversion between cancer cells and cancer stem cells/tumorinitiating cells/drug-tolerant persisters may occur and makes treatment even more challenging. This review highlights recent findings on the relationship between fatty acid metabolism, cancer stemness and therapeutic resistance and prompts discussion about the potential mechanisms by which fatty acid metabolism regulates the fate of cancer cells and therapeutic resistance.

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