Literature DB >> 24351292

Metastasis suppressor KISS1 seems to reverse the Warburg effect by enhancing mitochondrial biogenesis.

Wen Liu1, Benjamin H Beck, Kedar S Vaidya, Kevin T Nash, Kyle P Feeley, Scott W Ballinger, Keke M Pounds, Warren L Denning, Anne R Diers, Aimee Landar, Animesh Dhar, Tomoo Iwakuma, Danny R Welch.   

Abstract

Cancer cells tend to utilize aerobic glycolysis even under normoxic conditions, commonly called the "Warburg effect." Aerobic glycolysis often directly correlates with malignancy, but its purpose, if any, in metastasis remains unclear. When wild-type KISS1 metastasis suppressor is expressed, aerobic glycolysis decreases and oxidative phosphorylation predominates. However, when KISS1 is missing the secretion signal peptide (ΔSS), invasion and metastasis are no longer suppressed and cells continue to metabolize using aerobic glycolysis. KISS1-expressing cells have 30% to 50% more mitochondrial mass than ΔSS-expressing cells, which are accompanied by correspondingly increased mitochondrial gene expression and higher expression of PGC1α, a master coactivator that regulates mitochondrial mass and metabolism. PGC1α-mediated downstream pathways (i.e., fatty acid synthesis and β-oxidation) are differentially regulated by KISS1, apparently reliant upon direct KISS1 interaction with NRF1, a major transcription factor involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. Since the downstream effects could be reversed using short hairpin RNA to KISS1 or PGC1α, these data appear to directly connect changes in mitochondria mass, cellular glucose metabolism, and metastasis.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24351292      PMCID: PMC3946400          DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-1183

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  71 in total

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Review 6.  Rethinking the Warburg effect with Myc micromanaging glutamine metabolism.

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  39 in total

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Review 4.  Roles of the mitochondrial genetics in cancer metastasis: not to be ignored any longer.

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Review 5.  Defining the Hallmarks of Metastasis.

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Review 9.  KISS1 in metastatic cancer research and treatment: potential and paradoxes.

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Review 10.  Metabolic changes associated with tumor metastasis, part 2: Mitochondria, lipid and amino acid metabolism.

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