Literature DB >> 22281437

Autophagy and cancer cell metabolism.

Fred Lozy1, Vassiliki Karantza.   

Abstract

Autophagy is a catabolic process involving lysosomal turnover of proteins and organelles for maintenance of cellular homeostasis and mitigation of metabolic stress. Autophagy defects are linked to diseases, such as liver failure, neurodegeneration, inflammatory bowel disease, aging and cancer. The role of autophagy in tumorigenesis is complex and likely context-dependent. Human breast, ovarian and prostate cancers have allelic deletions of the essential autophagy regulator BECN1 and Becn1(+/-) and other autophagy-deficient transgenic mice are tumor-prone, whereas tumors with constitutive Ras activation, including human pancreatic cancers, upregulate basal autophagy and are commonly addicted to this pathway for survival and growth; furthermore, autophagy suppression by Fip200 deletion compromises PyMT-induced mammary tumorigenesis. The double-edged sword function of autophagy in cancer has been attributed to both cell- and non-cell-autonomous mechanisms, as autophagy defects promote cancer progression in association with oxidative and ER stress, DNA damage accumulation, genomic instability and persistence of inflammation, while functional autophagy enables cancer cell survival under stress and likely contributes to treatment resistance. In this review, we will focus on the intimate link between autophagy and cancer cell metabolism, a topic of growing interest in recent years, which has been recognized as highly clinically relevant and has become the focus of intense investigation in translational cancer research. Many tumor-associated conditions, including intermittent oxygen and nutrient deprivation, oxidative stress, fast growth and cell death suppression, modulate, in parallel and in interconnected ways, both cellular metabolism and autophagy to enable cancer cells to rapidly adapt to environmental stressors, maintain uncontrolled proliferation and evade the toxic effects of radiation and/or chemotherapy. Elucidating the interplay between autophagy and tumor cell metabolism will provide unique opportunities to identify new therapeutic targets and develop synthetically lethal treatment strategies that preferentially target cancer cells, while sparing normal tissues.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22281437      PMCID: PMC3639127          DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2012.01.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Cell Dev Biol        ISSN: 1084-9521            Impact factor:   7.727


  83 in total

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4.  Ammonia derived from glutaminolysis is a diffusible regulator of autophagy.

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Authors:  Zhenyu Yue; Shengkan Jin; Chingwen Yang; Arnold J Levine; Nathaniel Heintz
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  77 in total

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Review 4.  Cancer metabolism: what we can learn from proteomic analysis by mass spectrometry.

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Review 5.  Stress-induced self-cannibalism: on the regulation of autophagy by endoplasmic reticulum stress.

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Review 7.  Starvation based differential chemotherapy: 
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Review 8.  Nature and Implications of Oxidative and Nitrosative Stresses in Autoimmune Hepatitis.

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10.  Mitochondrial dysfunction in breast cancer cells prevents tumor growth: understanding chemoprevention with metformin.

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