| Literature DB >> 27329432 |
Laura Brunelli1, Elisa Caiola2, Mirko Marabese2, Massimo Broggini2, Roberta Pastorelli1.
Abstract
Oncogenes induce metabolic reprogramming on cancer cells. Recently, G12C KRAS mutation in isogenic NSCLC cell line has been shown to be a key player in promoting metabolic rewiring mainly through the regulation of glutamine metabolism to fuel growth and proliferation. Even though cell lines possessing many of the genetic backgrounds of the primary cancer they derive from could be a valuable pre-clinical model, they do not have the additional complexity present in the whole tumor that impact metabolism. This preliminary study is aimed to explore how cancer cell metabolism in culture might recapitulate the metabolic alterations present in vivo. Our result highlighted that the gross metabolic changes observed in G12C KRAS mutant cells growing in culture were also maintained in the derived xenograft model, suggesting that a simple in vitro cell model can give important insights into the metabolic alterations induced by cancer. This is of relevance for guiding effective targeting of those metabolic traits that underlie tumor progression and anticancer treatment responses.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27329432 PMCID: PMC4916601 DOI: 10.1038/srep28398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1OPLS-DA analysis of the quantified metabolites in NSCLC cell lines harboring G12C and WT KRAS isoforms and their relative derived xenograft tumor model.
Panel A, OPLS-DA score plot showing classes separated according to their metabolic signature, where classes correspond to NSCLC cell lines harboring G12C or WT isoforms. Panel B, OPLS-DA score plot showing classes separated according to their metabolic signature, where classes correspond to xenograft models derived from NSCLC G12C or WT isoforms cell lines.
Figure 2Metabolic pathway analysis highlighted the biochemical similarity between cell line and xenograft tumor.
Metabolic pathway analyses related to the metabolites that significantly differ in G12C NSCLC KRAS mutant cell lines and their relative xenograft model compared to KRAS WT, utilizing the MetaboAnalyst functional interpretation tools. Panel A, graphic summary of metabolite set enrichment analysis for G12C KRAS cell line. Panel B, graphic summary of metabolite set enrichment analysis for G12C KRAS derived xenograft model. The horizontal bars summarize the main metabolite sets identified in this analysis; the bars are coloured based on their p-values and the length is based on the -fold enrichment. Panel C, histograms of significant difference (p < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test) in abundance in NSCLC cell lines (as fold change between mutant and WT) of the metabolite subset mapped into the first three top-score enrichment category (protein synthesis, ammonia recycling and urea cycle). Panel D, histograms of significant difference (p < 0.05, Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon test) in abundance in NSCLC tumor xenografts (as fold change between mutant and WT) of the metabolite subset mapped into the first three top-score enrichment category (protein synthesis, ammonia recycling and urea cycle).