| Literature DB >> 26947070 |
César Cárdenas1, Marioly Müller2, Andrew McNeal3, Alenka Lovy4, Fabian Jaňa5, Galdo Bustos5, Felix Urra5, Natalia Smith5, Jordi Molgó6, J Alan Diehl7, Todd W Ridky3, J Kevin Foskett8.
Abstract
In the absence of low-level ER-to-mitochondrial Ca(2+) transfer, ATP levels fall, and AMPK-dependent, mTOR-independent autophagy is induced as an essential survival mechanism in many cell types. Here, we demonstrate that tumorigenic cancer cell lines, transformed primary human fibroblasts, and tumors in vivo respond similarly but that autophagy is insufficient for survival, and cancer cells die while their normal counterparts are spared. Cancer cell death is due to compromised bioenergetics that can be rescued with metabolic substrates or nucleotides and caused by necrosis associated with mitotic catastrophe during their proliferation. Our findings reveal an unexpected dependency on constitutive Ca(2+) transfer to mitochondria for viability of tumorigenic cells and suggest that mitochondrial Ca(2+) addiction is a feature of cancer cells.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26947070 PMCID: PMC4794382 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.02.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423