4.5 Article

Pyruvate carboxylase supports the pulmonary tropism of metastatic breast cancer

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13058-018-1008-9

Keywords

Breast cancer; Metastasis; Pyruvate carboxylase; Metabolism; Glycolysis; Hypoxia; Oxidative stress

Categories

Funding

  1. American Cancer Society [RSG-CSM130259]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01CA207751, R25CA128770]
  3. Indiana Elks Charities
  4. Indiana Clinical and Translational Science Institute [UL1TR001108]
  5. Purdue Center for Cancer Research via an NIH NCI [P30CA023168]

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Background: Overcoming systemic dormancy and initiating secondary tumor grow under unique microenvironmental conditions is a major rate-limiting step in metastatic progression. Disseminated tumor cells encounter major changes in nutrient supplies and oxidative stresses compared to the primary tumor and must demonstrate significant metabolic plasticity to adapt to specific metastatic sites. Recent studies suggest that differential utilization of pyruvate sits as a critical node in determining the organotropism of metastatic breast cancer. Pyruvate carboxylase (PC) is key enzyme that converts pyruvate into oxaloacetate for utilization in gluconeogenesis and replenishment of the TCA cycle. Methods: Patient survival was analyzed with respect to gene copy number alterations and differential mRNA expression levels of PC. Expression of PC was analyzed in the MCF-10A, D2-HAN and the 4 T1 breast cancer progression series under in vitro and in vivo growth conditions. PC expression was depleted via shRNAs and the impact on in vitro cell growth, mammary fat pad tumor growth, and pulmonary and non-pulmonary metastasis was assessed by bioluminescent imaging. Changes in glycolytic capacity, oxygen consumption, and response to oxidative stress were quantified upon PC depletion. Results: Genomic copy number increases in PC were observed in 16-30% of metastatic breast cancer patients. High expression of PC mRNA was associated with decreased patient survival in the MCTI and METABRIC patient datasets. Enhanced expression of PC was not recapitulated in breast cancer progression models when analyzed under glucose-rich in vitro culture conditions. In contrast, PC expression was dramatically enhanced upon glucose deprivation and in vivo in pulmonary metastases. Depletion of PC led to a dramatic decrease in 4 T1 pulmonary metastasis, but did not affect orthotopic primary tumor growth. Tail vein inoculations confirmed the role of PC in facilitating pulmonary, but not extrapulmonary tumor initiation. PC-depleted cells demonstrated a decrease in glycolytic capacity and oxygen consumption rates and an enhanced sensitivity to oxidative stress. Conclusions: Our studies indicate that PC is specifically required for the growth of breast cancer that has disseminated to the lungs. Overall, these findings point to the potential of targeting PC for the treatment of pulmonary metastatic breast cancer.

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