Literature DB >> 28186855

Tumor suppression by autophagy through the management of metabolic stress.

Shengkan V Jin, Eileen White.   

Abstract

Autophagy plays a critical protective role maintaining energy homeostasis and protein and organelle quality control. These functions are particularly important in times of metabolic stress and in cells with high energy demand such as cancer cells. In emerging cancer cells, autophagy defect may cause failure of energy homeostasis and protein and organelle quality control, leading to the accumulation of cellular damage in metabolic stress. Some manifestations of this damage, such as activation of the DNA damage response and generation of genome instability may promote tumor initiation and drive cell-autonomous tumor progression. In addition, in solid tumors, autophagy localizes to regions that are metabolically stressed. Defects in autophagy impair the survival of tumor cells in these areas, which is associated with increased cell death and inflammation. The cytokine response from inflammation may promote tumor growth and accelerate cell non-autonomous tumor progression. The overreaching theme is that autophagy protects cells from damage accumulation under conditions of metabolic stress allowing efficient tolerance and recovery from stress, and that this is a critical and novel tumor suppression mechanism. The challenge now is to define the precise aspects of autophagy, including energy homeostasis, and protein and organelle turnover, that are required for the proper management of metabolic stress that suppress tumorigenesis. Furthermore, we need to be able to identify human tumors with deficient autophagy, and to develop rational cancer therapies that take advantage of the altered metabolic state and stress responses inherent to this autophagy defect.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 28186855     DOI: 10.4161/auto.5830

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Autophagy        ISSN: 1554-8627            Impact factor:   16.016


  14 in total

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2.  Exosomal miR-1298 and lncRNA-RP11-583F2.2 Expression in Hepato-cellular Carcinoma.

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3.  Evaluation of Circulatory RNA-Based Biomarker Panel in Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

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4.  TRPC5-induced autophagy promotes drug resistance in breast carcinoma via CaMKKβ/AMPKα/mTOR pathway.

Authors:  Peng Zhang; Xiaoyu Liu; Hongjuan Li; Zhen Chen; Xiaoqiang Yao; Jian Jin; Xin Ma
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6.  Leucine-rich repeat and sterile alpha motif containing 1 promotes the oncogenic growth of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells.

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Review 7.  Targeting Autophagy for Cancer Treatment and Tumor Chemosensitization.

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8.  EGFRvIII expression triggers a metabolic dependency and therapeutic vulnerability sensitive to autophagy inhibition.

Authors:  Barry Jutten; Tom G Keulers; Hanneke J M Peeters; Marco B E Schaaf; Kim G M Savelkouls; Inge Compter; Ruud Clarijs; Olaf E M G Schijns; Linda Ackermans; Onno P M Teernstra; Marijke I Zonneveld; Resi M E Colaris; Ludwig Dubois; Marc A Vooijs; Johan Bussink; Julio Sotelo; Jan Theys; Guido Lammering; Kasper M A Rouschop
Journal:  Autophagy       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 16.016

9.  RACK1 promotes tumorigenicity of colon cancer by inducing cell autophagy.

Authors:  Ta Xiao; Wei Zhu; Wei Huang; Shan-Shan Lu; Xin-Hui Li; Zhi-Qiang Xiao; Hong Yi
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 8.469

Review 10.  Therapeutic Potential of Autophagy Modulation in Cholangiocarcinoma.

Authors:  Hector Perez-Montoyo
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2020-03-04       Impact factor: 6.600

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