4.7 Article

The Circadian Clock Regulates Metabolic Phenotype Rewiring Via HKDC1 and Modulates Tumor Progression and Drug Response in Colorectal Cancer

Journal

EBIOMEDICINE
Volume 33, Issue -, Pages 105-121

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2018.07.002

Keywords

Circadian clock; Colorectal cancer; Metabolic rewiring; Tumor progression; High-throughput circadian data; Metabolic network reconstruction; Circadian regulation of metabolism; Treatment response; Glycolysis

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)-eBio-CIRSPLICE [FKZ031A316]
  2. Dr. Rolf M. Schwiete Stiftung
  3. Jinan Huaiyin Hospital of Shandong Province
  4. Berlin School of Integrative Oncology (BSIO) of the Charite - Universitatsmedizin Berlin
  5. Italian Ministry of Health through Department of Medical Sciences, Division of Internal Medicine and Chronobiology Unit [RC1504ME53, RC1603ME43, RC1703ME43]
  6. IRCCS Scientific Institute and Regional General Hospital Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, Opera di Padre Pio da Pietrelcina, San Giovanni Rotondo (FG), Italy

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An endogenous molecular clockwork drives various cellular pathways including metabolism and the cell cycle. Its dysregulation is able to prompt pathological phenotypes including cancer. Besides dramatic metabolic alterations, cancer cells display severe changes in the clock phenotype with likely consequences in tumor progression and treatment response. In this study, we use a comprehensive systems-driven approach to investigate the effect of clock disruption on metabolic pathways and its impact on drug response in a cellular model of colon cancer progression. We identified distinctive time-related transcriptomic and metabolic features of a primary tumor and its metastatic counterpart. A mapping of the expression data to a comprehensive genome-scale reconstruction of human metabolism allowed for the in-depth functional characterization of 24 h-oscillating transcripts and pointed to a clock-driven metabolic reprogramming in tumorigenesis. In particular, we identified a set of five dock-regulated glycolysis genes, ALDH3A2, ALDOC, HKDC1, PCK2, and PDHB with differential temporal expression patterns. These findings were validated in organoids and in primary fibroblasts isolated from normal colon and colon adenocarcinoma from the same patient We further identified a reciprocal connection of HKDC1 to the dock in the primary tumor, which is lost in the metastatic cells. Interestingly, a disruption of the core-clock gene BMAL1 impacts on HKDC1 and leads to a time-dependent rewiring of metabolism, namely an increase in glycolytic activity, as well as changes in treatment response. This work provides novel evidence regarding the complex interplay between the circadian clock and metabolic alterations in carcinogenesis and identifies new connections between both systems with pivotal roles in cancer progression and response to therapy. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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