| Literature DB >> 30771209 |
Min-Kyue Shin1, Jae-Ho Cheong2,3,4,5,6.
Abstract
Metabolic and genotoxic stresses that arise during tumor progression and anti-cancer treatment, respectively, can impose a selective pressure to promote cancer evolution in the tumor microenvironment. This process ultimately selects for the most "fit" clones, which generally have a cancer stem cell like phenotype with features of drug resistance, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, invasiveness, and high metastatic potential. From a bioenergetics perspective, these cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) exhibit mitochondria-centric energy metabolism and are capable of opportunistically utilizing available nutrients such as fatty acids to generate ATP and other metabolic substances, providing a selective advantage for their survival in an impermissible environment and metabolic context. Thus, diverse therapeutic strategies are needed to efficiently tackle these CSCs and eliminate their advantage. Here, we review the metabolic and bioenergetic characteristics and vulnerabilities specific to CSCs, which can provide an unprecedented opportunity to curb CSC-driven cancer mortality rates. We particularly focus on the potential of a CSC bioenergetics-targeted strategy as a versatile therapeutic component of treatment modalities applicable to most cancer types. A cancer bioenergetics-targeted strategy can expand the inventory of combinatorial regimens in the current anti-cancer armamentarium.Entities:
Keywords: Bioenergetics; Cancer evolution; Cancer metabolism; Cancer stem cell; Fatty acid oxidation; Mitochondria; β-Oxidation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30771209 PMCID: PMC6399179 DOI: 10.1007/s12272-019-01127-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Pharm Res ISSN: 0253-6269 Impact factor: 4.946
Fig. 1Changes in mitochondrial dynamics during cancer evolution. Metabolic stressors such as nutrient deprivation due to tumor growth, as well as chemotherapy and radiotherapy act as a selection pressure to cancer cells. Metabolic adaptation through increased mitochondrial biogenesis and fusion—which result in numerous enlarged, elongated, and interconnected mitochondria—augments the oxidative capacity and ATP production in cancer cells, thereby enabling their survival. This process has been supported by the discovery of an oncocytic change and cancer stem cells (CSCs), both of which are associated with the malignant phenotypes of a cancer
Fig. 2Regulators of OXPHOS and FAO. In response to energy stress, cancer cells activate PGC-1α and AMPK signaling, which are mediated by the tumor suppressor genes PML, p53, and LKB1. Both signaling pathways in turn augment mitochondrial biogenesis, which mainly determines the activity of mitochondrial respiration. PPARα, activated by PGC-1α, and AMPK enhance CPT1, the rate-limiting enzyme of FAO. The oncogene MYC also induces FAO through an as-yet-unknown mechanism. Through these mechanisms, increased OXPHOS and FAO produce sufficient ATP for cancer progression
Drugs with anticancer efficacy via targeting mitochondrial bioenergetics
| Target | Drug | Cancer types | Developmental phase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mitochondrial biogenesis | ||||
| Mitochondrial HSP90 | Gamitrinib | Melanoma, glioblastoma | Preclinical | (Zhang et al. |
| Mitochondrial ribosome | Several antibiotics | Multiple types | Repositioning | (Lamb et al. |
| Oxidative phosphorylation | ||||
| Mitochondrial complex I | Biguanides | Multiple types | Repositioning | (Birsoy et al. |
| Rotenone | Glioblastoma | Repositioning | (Janiszewska et al. | |
| BAY 87-2243 | Melanoma | Preclinical | (Schöckel et al. | |
| IACS-010759 | AML and solid tumors | Phase 1 clinical | (Molina et al. | |
| Mitochondrial complexes | Graphene | Multiple types | Preclinical | (Zhou et al. |
| MCT1/2 | AR-C155858 | Breast cancer | Preclinical | (Lamb et al. |
| Unknown | Nitazoxanide | Colorectal cancer | Repositioning | (Senkowski et al. |
| Niclosamide | Breast cancer, Ovarian cancer | Repositioning | (Wang et al. | |
| Fatty acid oxidation | ||||
| CPT1 | Etomoxir | Multiple types | Repositioning | (Camarda et al. |
| Perhexiline | Multiple types | Repositioning | (Rodriguez-Enriquez et al. | |
| ST1326 | Lymphoma, leukemia | Preclinical | (Samudio and Konopleva | |
| Unknown | Avocatin B | AML | Preclinical | (Lee et al. |
| PPARα | NXT629 | Melanoma, Ovarian cancer | Preclinical | (Stebbins et al. |