4.6 Article

Downregulation of stromal BRCA1 drives breast cancer tumor growth via upregulation of HIF-1α, autophagy and ketone body production

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 11, Issue 22, Pages 4167-4173

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/cc.22316

Keywords

BRCA1; cancer metabolism; stromal fibroblasts; ketone bodies; HIF1; mitochondrial OXPHOS; autophagy; mitophagy

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Funding

  1. Young Investigator Award from the Breast Cancer Alliance
  2. Margaret Q. Landenberger Research Foundation
  3. Centre grant in Manchester from Breakthrough Breast Cancer in the U.K.
  4. Advanced ERC Grant from the European Research Council
  5. Breast Cancer Now [MAN-Q1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Our recent studies have mechanistically demonstrated that cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) produce energy-rich metabolites that functionally support the growth of cancer cells. Also, several authors have demonstrated that DNA instability in the tumor stroma greatly contributes to carcinogenesis. To further test this hypothesis, we stably knocked-down BRCA1 expression in human hTERT-immortalized fibroblasts (shBRCA1) using an shRNA lentiviral approach. As expected, shBRCA1 fibroblasts displayed an elevated growth rate. Using immunofluorescence and immunoblot analysis, shBRCA1 fibroblasts demonstrated an increase in markers of autophagy and mitophagy. Most notably, shBRCA1 fibroblasts also displayed an elevation of HIF-1 alpha expression. In accordance with these findings, shBRCA1 fibroblasts showed a 5.5-fold increase in ketone body production; ketone bodies function as high-energy mitochondrial fuels. This is consistent with the onset of mitochondrial dysfunction in BRCA1-deficient fibroblasts. Conversely, after 48 h of co-culturing shBRCA1 fibroblasts with a human breast cancer cell line (MDA-MB-231 cell), mitochondrial activity was enhanced in these epithelial cancer cells. Interestingly, our preclinical studies using xenografts demonstrated that shBRCA1 fibroblasts induced an similar to 2.2-fold increase in tumor growth when co-injected with MDA-MB-231 cells into nude mice. We conclude that a BRCA1 deficiency in the tumor stroma metabolically promotes cancer progression, via ketone production.

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