| Literature DB >> 28239646 |
Yuan Yuan Wang1,2,3, Camille Attané2, Delphine Milhas1, Béatrice Dirat1,2, Stéphanie Dauvillier1, Adrien Guerard1, Julia Gilhodes4, Ikrame Lazar1, Nathalie Alet5, Victor Laurent1, Sophie Le Gonidec2, Denis Biard6, Caroline Hervé5, Frédéric Bost7, Guo Sheng Ren3, Françoise Bono5, Ghislaine Escourrou8, Marc Prentki9, Laurence Nieto1, Philippe Valet2, Catherine Muller1.
Abstract
In breast cancer, a key feature of peritumoral adipocytes is their loss of lipid content observed both in vitro and in human tumors. The free fatty acids (FFAs), released by adipocytes after lipolysis induced by tumor secretions, are transferred and stored in tumor cells as triglycerides in lipid droplets. In tumor cell lines, we demonstrate that FFAs can be released over time from lipid droplets through an adipose triglyceride lipase-dependent (ATGL-dependent) lipolytic pathway. In vivo, ATGL is expressed in human tumors where its expression correlates with tumor aggressiveness and is upregulated by contact with adipocytes. The released FFAs are then used for fatty acid β-oxidation (FAO), an active process in cancer but not normal breast epithelial cells, and regulated by coculture with adipocytes. However, in cocultivated cells, FAO is uncoupled from ATP production, leading to AMPK/acetyl-CoA carboxylase activation, a circle that maintains this state of metabolic remodeling. The increased invasive capacities of tumor cells induced by coculture are completely abrogated by inhibition of the coupled ATGL-dependent lipolysis/FAO pathways. These results show a complex metabolic symbiosis between tumor-surrounding adipocytes and cancer cells that stimulate their invasiveness, highlighting ATGL as a potential therapeutic target to impede breast cancer progression.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28239646 PMCID: PMC5313068 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.87489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708