| Literature DB >> 34206240 |
Jiřina Hofmanová1,2, Josef Slavík3, Miroslav Ciganek3, Petra Ovesná1,4, Zuzana Tylichová1, Martina Karasová1,2, Ondřej Zapletal1, Nicol Straková1,3, Jiřina Procházková1,3, Jan Bouchal5, Zdeněk Kolář5, Jiří Ehrmann6, Monika Levková5, Zlatka Hušková5, Pavel Skalický6, Alois Kozubík1,2, Miroslav Machala3, Jan Vondráček1.
Abstract
The development of colon cancer, one of the most common malignancies, is accompanied with numerous lipid alterations. However, analyses of whole tumor samples may not always provide an accurate description of specific changes occurring directly in tumor epithelial cells. Here, we analyzed in detail the phospholipid (PL), lysophospholipid (lysoPL), and fatty acid (FA) profiles of purified EpCAM+ cells, isolated from tumor and adjacent non-tumor tissues of colon cancer patients. We found that a number of FAs increased significantly in isolated tumor cells, which also included a number of long polyunsaturated FAs. Higher levels of FAs were associated with increased expression of FA synthesis genes, as well as with altered expression of enzymes involved in FA elongation and desaturation, including particularly fatty acid synthase, stearoyl-CoA desaturase, fatty acid desaturase 2 and ELOVL5 fatty acid elongase 5 We identified significant changes in ratios of specific lysoPLs and corresponding PLs. A number of lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylethanolamine species, containing long-chain and very-long chain FAs, often with high numbers of double bonds, were significantly upregulated in tumor cells. Increased de novo synthesis of very long-chain FAs, or, altered uptake or incorporation of these FAs into specific lysoPLs in tumor cells, may thus contribute to reprogramming of cellular phospholipidome and membrane alterations observed in colon cancer.Entities:
Keywords: EpCAM; colorectal carcinoma; desaturation; epithelial cells; fatty acid synthesis; lipidomics; lysophospholipids; phospholipids
Year: 2021 PMID: 34206240 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22136650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923