Literature DB >> 20855962

Autophagy in cancer associated fibroblasts promotes tumor cell survival: Role of hypoxia, HIF1 induction and NFκB activation in the tumor stromal microenvironment.

Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn1, Casey Trimmer, Zhao Lin, Diana Whitaker-Menezes, Barbara Chiavarina, Jie Zhou, Chengwang Wang, Stephanos Pavlides, Maria P Martinez-Cantarin, Franco Capozza, Agnieszka K Witkiewicz, Neal Flomenberg, Anthony Howell, Richard G Pestell, Jaime Caro, Michael P Lisanti, Federica Sotgia.   

Abstract

Recently, using a co-culture system, we demonstrated that MCF7 epithelial cancer cells induce oxidative stress in adjacent cancer-associated fibroblasts, resulting in the autophagic/lysosomal degradation of stromal caveolin-1 (Cav-1). However, the detailed signaling mechanism(s) underlying this process remain largely unknown. Here, we show that hypoxia is sufficient to induce the autophagic degradation of Cav-1 in stromal fibroblasts, which is blocked by the lysosomal inhibitor chloroquine. Concomitant with the hypoxia-induced degradation of Cav-1, we see the upregulation of a number of well-established autophagy/mitophagy markers, namely LC3, ATG16L, BNIP3, BNIP3L, HIF-1α and NFκB. In addition, pharmacological activation of HIF-1α drives Cav-1 degradation, while pharmacological inactivation of HIF-1 prevents the downregulation of Cav-1. Similarly, pharmacological inactivation of NFκB--another inducer of autophagy-prevents Cav-1 degradation. Moreover, treatment with an inhibitor of glutathione synthase, namely BSO, which induces oxidative stress via depletion of the reduced glutathione pool, is sufficient to induce the autophagic degradation of Cav-1. Thus, it appears that oxidative stress mediated induction of HIF1- and NFκB-activation in fibroblasts drives the autophagic degradation of Cav-1. In direct support of this hypothesis, we show that MCF7 cancer cells activate HIF-1α- and NFκB-driven luciferase reporters in adjacent cancer-associated fibroblasts, via a paracrine mechanism. Consistent with these findings, acute knock-down of Cav-1 in stromal fibroblasts, using an siRNA approach, is indeed sufficient to induce autophagy, with the upregulation of both lysosomal and mitophagy markers. How does the loss of stromal Cav-1 and the induction of stromal autophagy affect cancer cell survival? Interestingly, we show that a loss of Cav-1 in stromal fibroblasts protects adjacent cancer cells against apoptotic cell death. Thus, autophagic cancer-associated fibroblasts, in addition to providing recycled nutrients for cancer cell metabolism, also play a protective role in preventing the death of adjacent epithelial cancer cells. We demonstrate that cancer-associated fibroblasts upregulate the expression of TIGAR in adjacent epithelial cancer cells, thereby conferring resistance to apoptosis and autophagy. Finally, the mammary fat pads derived from Cav-1 (-/-) null mice show a hypoxia-like response in vivo, with the upregulation of autophagy markers, such as LC3 and BNIP3L. Taken together, our results provide direct support for the "Autophagic Tumor Stroma Model of Cancer Metabolism", and explain the exceptional prognostic value of a loss of stromal Cav-1 in cancer patients. Thus, a loss of stromal fibroblast Cav-1 is a biomarker for chronic hypoxia, oxidative stress and autophagy in the tumor microenvironment, consistent with its ability to predict early tumor recurrence, lymph node metastasis and tamoxifen-resistance in human breast cancers. Our results imply that cancer patients lacking stromal Cav-1 should benefit from HIF-inhibitors, NFκB-inhibitors, anti-oxidant therapies, as well as autophagy/lysosomal inhibitors. These complementary targeted therapies could be administered either individually or in combination, to prevent the onset of autophagy in the tumor stromal compartment, which results in a "lethal" tumor microenvironment.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20855962      PMCID: PMC3047617          DOI: 10.4161/cc.9.17.12928

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Cycle        ISSN: 1551-4005            Impact factor:   4.534


  67 in total

1.  Prolyl hydroxylase-1 negatively regulates IkappaB kinase-beta, giving insight into hypoxia-induced NFkappaB activity.

Authors:  Eoin P Cummins; Edurne Berra; Katrina M Comerford; Amandine Ginouves; Kathleen T Fitzgerald; Fergal Seeballuck; Catherine Godson; Jens E Nielsen; Paul Moynagh; Jacques Pouyssegur; Cormac T Taylor
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-11-17       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Free radicals, metals and antioxidants in oxidative stress-induced cancer.

Authors:  M Valko; C J Rhodes; J Moncol; M Izakovic; M Mazur
Journal:  Chem Biol Interact       Date:  2006-01-23       Impact factor: 5.192

Review 3.  Good cop, bad cop: the different faces of NF-kappaB.

Authors:  N D Perkins; T D Gilmore
Journal:  Cell Death Differ       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 15.828

4.  TIGAR, a p53-inducible regulator of glycolysis and apoptosis.

Authors:  Karim Bensaad; Atsushi Tsuruta; Mary A Selak; M Nieves Calvo Vidal; Katsunori Nakano; Ramon Bartrons; Eyal Gottlieb; Karen H Vousden
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2006-07-14       Impact factor: 41.582

Review 5.  Fibroblasts in cancer.

Authors:  Raghu Kalluri; Michael Zeisberg
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 60.716

6.  Tumor cells induce the cancer associated fibroblast phenotype via caveolin-1 degradation: implications for breast cancer and DCIS therapy with autophagy inhibitors.

Authors:  Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Stephanos Pavlides; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Kristin M Daumer; Janet N Milliman; Barbara Chiavarina; Gemma Migneco; Agnieszka K Witkiewicz; Maria P Martinez-Cantarin; Neal Flomenberg; Anthony Howell; Richard G Pestell; Michael P Lisanti; Federica Sotgia
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2010-06-15       Impact factor: 4.534

7.  Loss of stromal caveolin-1 leads to oxidative stress, mimics hypoxia and drives inflammation in the tumor microenvironment, conferring the "reverse Warburg effect": a transcriptional informatics analysis with validation.

Authors:  Stephanos Pavlides; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Iset Vera; Neal Flomenberg; Philippe G Frank; Mathew C Casimiro; Chenguang Wang; Paolo Fortina; Sankar Addya; Richard G Pestell; Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2010-06-01       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 8.  Post-translational modifications regulating the activity and function of the nuclear factor kappa B pathway.

Authors:  N D Perkins
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2006-10-30       Impact factor: 9.867

9.  HIF-1 mediates adaptation to hypoxia by actively downregulating mitochondrial oxygen consumption.

Authors:  Ioanna Papandreou; Rob A Cairns; Lucrezia Fontana; Ai Lin Lim; Nicholas C Denko
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 27.287

10.  HIF-1-mediated expression of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase: a metabolic switch required for cellular adaptation to hypoxia.

Authors:  Jung-whan Kim; Irina Tchernyshyov; Gregg L Semenza; Chi V Dang
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 27.287

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  207 in total

Review 1.  The autophagic tumor stroma model of cancer or "battery-operated tumor growth": A simple solution to the autophagy paradox.

Authors:  Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Stephanos Pavlides; Barbara Chiavarina; Gloria Bonuccelli; Trimmer Casey; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Gemma Migneco; Agnieszka Witkiewicz; Renee Balliet; Isabelle Mercier; Chengwang Wang; Neal Flomenberg; Anthony Howell; Zhao Lin; Jaime Caro; Richard G Pestell; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2010-11-30       Impact factor: 4.534

2.  Using the "reverse Warburg effect" to identify high-risk breast cancer patients: stromal MCT4 predicts poor clinical outcome in triple-negative breast cancers.

Authors:  Agnieszka K Witkiewicz; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Abhijit Dasgupta; Nancy J Philp; Zhao Lin; Ricardo Gandara; Sharon Sneddon; Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2012-03-15       Impact factor: 4.534

3.  The fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase TIGAR suppresses NF-κB signaling by directly inhibiting the linear ubiquitin assembly complex LUBAC.

Authors:  Yan Tang; Hyokjoon Kwon; Brian A Neel; Michal Kasher-Meron; Jacob B Pessin; Eijiro Yamada; Jeffrey E Pessin
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2018-04-12       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 4.  Warburg meets autophagy: cancer-associated fibroblasts accelerate tumor growth and metastasis via oxidative stress, mitophagy, and aerobic glycolysis.

Authors:  Stephanos Pavlides; Iset Vera; Ricardo Gandara; Sharon Sneddon; Richard G Pestell; Isabelle Mercier; Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Diana Whitaker-Menezes; Anthony Howell; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2011-11-17       Impact factor: 8.401

Review 5.  Metabolic implication of tumor:stroma crosstalk in breast cancer.

Authors:  Andrea Morandi; Paola Chiarugi
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2014-01-24       Impact factor: 4.599

6.  Ketones and lactate increase cancer cell "stemness," driving recurrence, metastasis and poor clinical outcome in breast cancer: achieving personalized medicine via Metabolo-Genomics.

Authors:  Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Marco Prisco; Adam Ertel; Aristotelis Tsirigos; Zhao Lin; Stephanos Pavlides; Chengwang Wang; Neal Flomenberg; Erik S Knudsen; Anthony Howell; Richard G Pestell; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2011-04-15       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 7.  Stromal-epithelial metabolic coupling in cancer: integrating autophagy and metabolism in the tumor microenvironment.

Authors:  Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn; Stephanos Pavlides; Anthony Howell; Richard G Pestell; Herbert B Tanowitz; Federica Sotgia; Michael P Lisanti
Journal:  Int J Biochem Cell Biol       Date:  2011-02-15       Impact factor: 5.085

Review 8.  Cancer Metabolism Drives a Stromal Regenerative Response.

Authors:  Simon Schwörer; Santosha A Vardhana; Craig B Thompson
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2019-02-14       Impact factor: 27.287

Review 9.  Autophagy in endometriosis.

Authors:  Hui-Li Yang; Jie Mei; Kai-Kai Chang; Wen-Jie Zhou; Li-Qing Huang; Ming-Qing Li
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2017-11-15       Impact factor: 4.060

Review 10.  Anti-inflammatory/antioxidant use in long-term maintenance cancer therapy: a new therapeutic approach to disease progression and recurrence.

Authors:  Sarah Crawford
Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 8.168

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