| Literature DB >> 29704241 |
Jie Feng1,2, Qi Zhang3,4,5, Chuzhong Li1,2, Yang Zhou6,7, Sida Zhao1, Lichuan Hong1, Qi Song4,8, Shenyuan Yu1, Chunxiu Hu6,7, Herui Wang4, Chengyuan Mao3, Matthew J Shepard3,9, Shuyu Hao2, Gifty Dominah3, Mitchell Sun3, Hong Wan1,2, Deric M Park4, Mark R Gilbert4, Guowang Xu6,7, Zhengping Zhuang3,4, Yazhuo Zhang1,2,10,11.
Abstract
Oncocytomas represent a subset of benign pituitary adenomas that are characterized by significant mitochondrial hyperplasia. Mitochondria are key organelles for energy generation and metabolic intermediate production for biosynthesis in tumour cells, so understanding the mechanism underlying mitochondrial biogenesis and its impact on cellular metabolism in oncocytoma is vital. Here, we studied surgically resected pituitary oncocytomas by using multi-omic analyses. Whole-exome sequencing did not reveal any nuclear mutations, but identified several somatic mutations of mitochondrial DNA, and dysfunctional respiratory complex I. Metabolomic analysis suggested that oxidative phosphorylation was reduced within individual mitochondria, and that there was no reciprocal increase in glycolytic activity. Interestingly, we found a reduction in the cellular lactate level and reduced expression of lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA), which contributed to mitochondrial biogenesis in an in vitro cell model. It is of note that the hypoxia-response signalling pathway was not upregulated in pituitary oncocytomas, thereby failing to enhance glycolysis. Proteomic analysis showed that 14-3-3η was exclusively overexpressed in oncocytomas, and that 14-3-3η was capable of inhibiting glycolysis, leading to mitochondrial biogenesis in the presence of rotenone. In particular, 14-3-3η inhibited LDHA by direct interaction in the setting of complex I dysfunction, highlighting the role of 14-3-3η overexpression and inefficient oxidative phosphorylation in oncocytoma mitochondrial biogenesis. These findings deepen our understanding of the metabolic changes that occur within oncocytomas, and shine a light on the mechanism of mitochondrial biogenesis, providing a novel perspective on metabolic adaptation in tumour cells.Entities:
Keywords: metabolic reprogramming; metabolomics; mtDNA mutation; pituitary adenoma; proteomics; whole-exome sequencing
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29704241 PMCID: PMC7987132 DOI: 10.1002/path.5090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996