| Literature DB >> 30503555 |
Ruiqi Liu1, Yuejin Li2, Lantian Tian3, Huawen Shi4, Jiabei Wang5, Yingjian Liang6, Boshi Sun7, Shuangjia Wang8, Meng Zhou9, Li Wu10, Jianhua Nie11, Binlin Lin12, Shuli Tang13, Yanqiao Zhang14, Guangyu Wang15, Chunhui Zhang16, Jiguang Han17, Benjie Xu18, Lianxin Liu19, Kunmei Gong20, Tongsen Zheng21.
Abstract
Gankyrin plays important roles in tumorigenicity and metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We have for the first time investigated the effects of Gankyrin on glycolysis and glutaminolysis both in vitro and in vivo, including in patient-derived xenografts. We reported Gankyrin increases glucose consumption, lactate production, glutamine consumption and glutamate production in HCC through upregulating the expression of the transporters and enzymes involved in glycolysis and glutaminolysis, including HK2, GLUT1, LDHA, PKM2, ASCT2 and GLS1. We further demonstrated that Gankyrin drives glycolysis and glutaminolysis through upregulating c-Myc via activating β-catenin signaling. Importantly, we found c-Myc mediated metabolic reprogramming might contribute to the tumorigenicity, metastasis and drug resistance induced by Gankyrin. c-Myc inhibitor synergizes with Sorafenib or Regorafenib to suppress HCC PDX tumors with high Gankyrin levels. We detected a significant correlation between Gankyrin and β-catenin expression levels in a cohort of HCC biopsies, and combination of these two parameters is a more powerful predictor of poor prognosis. Collectively, our results uncovered that Gankyrin functions as an essential regulator in glycolysis and glutaminolysis via activation of β-catenin/c-Myc to promotes tumorigenesis, metastasis and drug resistance in human HCC.Entities:
Keywords: Drug resistance; Gankyrin; Metabolic reprogramming; Tumorigenecity; c-Myc
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30503555 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2018.11.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679