| Literature DB >> 31034992 |
Marco Antonio Lacerda-Abreu1, Thais Russo-Abrahão1, Daniela Cosentino-Gomes1, Michelle Tanny Cunha Nascimento1, Luiz Fernando Carvalho-Kelly1, Tainá Gomes2, Mariana Figueiredo Rodrigues2, Sandra König3, Franklin David Rumjanek2, Robson Q Monteiro2, José Roberto Meyer-Fernandes4.
Abstract
Tumor microenvironment has a high concentration of inorganic phosphate (Pi), which is actually a marker for tumor progression. Regarding Pi another class of transporter has been recently studied, an H+-dependent Pi transporter, that is stimulated at acidic pH in Caco2BBE human intestinal cells. In this study, we characterized the H+-dependent Pi transport in breast cancer cell (MDA-MB-231) and around the cancer tissue. MDA-MB-231 cell line presented higher levels of H+-dependent Pi transport as compared to other breast cell lines, such as MCF-10A, MCF-7 and T47-D. The Pi transport was linear as a function of time and exhibited a Michaelis-Menten kinetic of Km = 1.387 ± 0.1674 mM Pi and Vmax = 198.6 ± 10.23 Pi × h-1 × mg protein-1 hence reflecting a low affinity Pi transport. H+-dependent Pi uptake was higher at acidic pH. FCCP, Bafilomycin A1 and SCH28080, which deregulate the intracellular levels of protons, inhibited the H+-dependent Pi transport. No effect on pHi was observed in the absence of inorganic phosphate. PAA, an H+-dependent Pi transport inhibitor, reduced the Pi transport activity, cell proliferation, adhesion, and migration. Arsenate, a structural analog of Pi, inhibited the Pi transport. At high Pi conditions, the H+-dependent Pi transport was five-fold higher than the Na+-dependent Pi transport, thus reflecting a low affinity Pi transport. The occurrence of an H+-dependent Pi transporter in tumor cells may endow them with an alternative path for Pi uptake in situations in which Na+-dependent Pi transport is saturated within the tumor microenvironment, thus regulating the energetically expensive tumor processes.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; H(+)-dependent Pi transport; Inorganic phosphate; MDA-MB-231
Year: 2019 PMID: 31034992 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2019.04.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis ISSN: 0925-4439 Impact factor: 5.187