| Literature DB >> 28427560 |
Maria Rosaria Amoroso1, Danilo Swann Matassa1, Ilenia Agliarulo1, Rosario Avolio1, Francesca Maddalena2, Valentina Condelli2, Matteo Landriscina3, Franca Esposito4.
Abstract
Metabolic reprogramming is one of the most frequent stress-adaptive response of cancer cells to survive environmental changes and meet increasing nutrient requirements during their growth. These modifications involve cellular bioenergetics and cross talk with surrounding microenvironment, in a dynamic network that connect different molecular processes, such as energy production, inflammatory response, and drug resistance. Even though the Warburg effect has long been considered the main metabolic feature of cancer cells, recent reports identify mitochondrial oxidative metabolism as a driving force for tumor growth in an increasing number of cellular contexts. In recent years, oxidative phosphorylation has been linked to a remodeling of inflammatory response due to autocrine or paracrine secretion of interleukines that, in turn, induces a regulation of gene expression involving, among others, molecules responsible for the onset of drug resistance. This process is especially relevant in ovarian cancer, characterized by low survival, high frequency of disease relapse and chemoresistance. Recently, the molecular chaperone TRAP1 (tumor necrosis factor-associated protein 1) has been identified as a key junction molecule in these processes in ovarian cancer: in fact, TRAP1 mediates a metabolic switch toward oxidative phosphorylation that, in turn, triggers cytokines secretion, with consequent gene expression remodeling, finally leading to cisplatin resistance and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in ovarian cancer models. This review summarizes how metabolism, chemoresistance, inflammation, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition are strictly interconnected, and how TRAP1 stays at the crossroads of these processes, thus shedding new lights on molecular networks at the basis of ovarian cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Chemoresistance; Cisplatin resistance; Combinatorial therapy; Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; Inflammation; Metabolic rewiring; Ovarian cancer; Oxidative phosphorylation; Stress-adaptive responses; TRAP1
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28427560 DOI: 10.1016/bs.apcsb.2017.01.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Protein Chem Struct Biol ISSN: 1876-1623 Impact factor: 3.507