4.6 Article

Mitochondrial metabolism in cancer metastasis Visualizing tumor cell mitochondria and the reverse Warburg effect in positive lymph node tissue

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages 1445-1454

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/cc.19841

Keywords

caveolin-1; oxidative stress; MCT4; metabolic coupling; tumor stroma; SLC16A3; monocarboxylic acid transporter; two-compartment tumor metabolism; metastasis; TOMM20; complex IV; OXPHOS; mitochondria; inflammation

Categories

Funding

  1. Breast Cancer Alliance (BCA)
  2. American Cancer Society (ACS)
  3. Margaret Q. Landenberger Research Foundation
  4. NIH/NCI [R01-CA-080250, R01-CA-098779, R01-CA-120876, R01-AR-055660, R01-CA-70896, R01-CA-75503, R01-CA-86072, R01-CA-107382]
  5. Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
  6. Susan G. Komen Career Catalyst Grant
  7. Dr. Ralph and Marian C. Falk Medical Research Trust
  8. NIH/NCI Cancer Center [P30-CA-56036]
  9. Pennsylvania Department of Health
  10. Centre grant in Manchester from Breakthrough Breast Cancer in the UK
  11. European Research Council

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We have recently proposed a new two-compartment model for understanding the Warburg effect in tumor metabolism. In this model, glycolytic stromal cells produce mitochondrial fuels (L-lactate and ketone bodies) that are then transferred to oxidative epithelial cancer cells, driving OXPHOS and mitochondrial metabolism. Thus, stromal catabolism fuels anabolic tumor growth via energy transfer. We have termed this new cancer paradigm the reverse Warburg effect, because stromal cells undergo aerobic glycolysis, rather than tumor cells. To assess whether this mechanism also applies during cancer cell metastasis, we analyzed the bioenergetic status of breast cancer lymph node metastases, by employing a series of metabolic protein markers. For this purpose, we used MCT4 to identify glycolytic cells. Similarly, we used TOMM20 and COX staining as markers of mitochondrial mass and OXPHOS activity, respectively. Consistent with the reverse Warburg effect, our results indicate that metastatic breast cancer cells amplify oxidative mitochondrial metabolism (OXPHOS) and that adjacent stromal cells are glycolytic and lack detectable mitochondria. Glycolytic stromal cells included cancer-associated fibroblasts, adipocytes and inflammatory cells. Double labeling experiments with glycolytic (MCT4) and oxidative (TOMM20 or COX) markers directly shows that at least two different metabolic compartments co-exist, side-by-side, within primary tumors and their metastases. Since cancer-associated immune cells appeared glycolytic, this observation may also explain how inflammation literally fuels tumor progression and metastatic dissemination, by feeding mitochondrial metabolism in cancer cells. Finally, MCT4(+) and TOMM20(-) glycolytic cancer cells were rarely observed, indicating that the conventional Warburg effect does not frequently occur in cancer-positive lymph node metastases.

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