| Literature DB >> 32010625 |
Iñigo San-Millán1,2, Colleen G Julian3, Christopher Matarazzo3, Janel Martinez1, George A Brooks4.
Abstract
Lactate is a ubiquitous molecule in cancer. In this exploratory study, our aim was to test the hypothesis that lactate could function as an oncometabolite by evaluating whether lactate exposure modifies the expression of oncogenes, or genes encoding transcription factors, cell division, and cell proliferation in MCF7 cells, a human breast cancer cell line. Gene transcription was compared between MCF7 cells incubated in (a) glucose/glutamine-free media (control), (b) glucose-containing media to stimulate endogenous lactate production (replicating some of the original Warburg studies), and (c) glucose-containing media supplemented with L-lactate (10 and 20 mM). We found that both endogenous, glucose-derived lactate and exogenous, lactate supplementation significantly affected the transcription of key oncogenes (MYC, RAS, and PI3KCA), transcription factors (HIF1A and E2F1), tumor suppressors (BRCA1, BRCA2) as well as cell cycle and proliferation genes involved in breast cancer (AKT1, ATM, CCND1, CDK4, CDKN1A, CDK2B) (0.001 < p < 0.05 for all genes). Our findings support the hypothesis that lactate acts as an oncometabolite in MCF7 cells. Further research is necessary on other cell lines and biopsy cultures to show generality of the findings and reveal the mechanisms by which dysregulated lactate metabolism could act as an oncometabolite in carcinogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell cycle genes; lactate; oncogenes; transcription factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32010625 PMCID: PMC6971189 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Fold changes in expression for cancer-related genes between glucose-starved MCF7 cells vs. MCF7 cells exposed to 0, 10, or 20 mM lactate for 6 or 48 h.
| NRAS | – | 3.56 | – | 2.31 | 2.58 | 1.92 |
| PIK3CA | – | 4.31 | – | 2.04 | 2.20 | 2.03 |
| MYC | 1.88 | 7.75 | 6.28 | 3.33 | 2.80 | 2.81 |
| ATM | – | – | – | 8.14 | 4.04 | 4.22 |
| CCND1 | – | 2.60 | 2.71 | 2.40 | 2.33 | 2.37 |
| CDK4 | 2.51 | 6.36 | 5.64 | 3.97 | 3.59 | 3.02 |
| CDK1A | – | 6.77 | 4.71 | 2.59 | 1.36 | 2.48 |
| CDK2b | 1.58 | 6.82 | – | 3.75 | 2.48 | 2.60 |
| AKT1 | 1.98 | 3.35 | 1.46 | 2.15 | 2.72 | 1.75 |
| MIF | – | 7.55 | 5.19 | – | – | 2.09 |
| BRCA1 | 1.70 | 3.42 | 3.71 | 3.42 | 4.27 | 2.43 |
| BRCA2 | – | 6.14 | 5.55 | 4.88 | 4.94 | 3.31 |
| HIF1A | – | 4.42 | 4.80 | 2.87 | 4.07 | 2.93 |
| E2F1 | 1.58 | 3.37 | 3.28 | 2.30 | 2.56 | 1.68 |
Results are shown for genes showing a 1.5-fold or greater change in expression and a p-value ≤0.05.
Genes classified according to NIH Genetics Home Reference (.
Figure 1Glucose-derived lactate (Warburg Effect) in MCF-7 cells after 6 and 48 h of incubation in glucose (p < 0.001).
Figure 2Fold-regulation of Glucose-derived lactate (Warburg Effect) transcriptional activity for MCF7 cells cultured for 6 and 48 h in glucose media relative to controls (MCF7 cells cultured in glucose/glutamine-free media) (p's ≤ 0.05–0.01).
Figure 3Treatment with exogenous lactate (10 or 20 mM) upregulates the expression of several key genes in MCF7 cells. The fold upregulation of expression with 6 and 48 h exposure to 10 mM (A) or 20 mM lactate (B) relative to controls (MCF7 cells cultured for 6 h in glucose/glutamine-free media) (p's ≤ 0.05–0.001).