| Literature DB >> 35637408 |
Minghui Cao1, Roi Isaac2, Wei Yan1, Xianhui Ruan1, Li Jiang1, Yuhao Wan1, Jessica Wang1, Emily Wang1, Christine Caron1, Steven Neben3, Denis Drygin3, Donald P Pizzo1, Xiwei Wu4, Xuxiang Liu1, Andrew R Chin1, Miranda Y Fong1, Ziting Gao5, Kaizhu Guo5, Oluwole Fadare1, Richard B Schwab2, Yuan Yuan6, Susan E Yost6, Joanne Mortimer6, Wenwan Zhong5, Wei Ying2, Jack D Bui1, Dorothy D Sears2,7,8,9, Jerrold M Olefsky2, Shizhen Emily Wang10,11.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies demonstrate an association between breast cancer (BC) and systemic dysregulation of glucose metabolism. However, how BC influences glucose homeostasis remains unknown. We show that BC-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) suppress pancreatic insulin secretion to impair glucose homeostasis. EV-encapsulated miR-122 targets PKM in β-cells to suppress glycolysis and ATP-dependent insulin exocytosis. Mice receiving high-miR-122 EVs or bearing BC tumours exhibit suppressed insulin secretion, enhanced endogenous glucose production, impaired glucose tolerance and fasting hyperglycaemia. These effects contribute to tumour growth and are abolished by inhibiting EV secretion or miR-122, restoring PKM in β-cells or supplementing insulin. Compared with non-cancer controls, patients with BC have higher levels of circulating EV-encapsulated miR-122 and fasting glucose concentrations but lower fasting insulin; miR-122 levels are positively associated with glucose and negatively associated with insulin. Therefore, EV-mediated impairment of whole-body glycaemic control may contribute to tumour progression and incidence of type 2 diabetes in some patients with BC.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35637408 PMCID: PMC9233030 DOI: 10.1038/s41556-022-00919-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.213