MTFR2-Mediated Fission Drives Fatty Acid and Mitochondrial Co-Transfer from Hepatic Stellate Cells to Tumor Cells Fueling Oncogenesis.

MTFR2 介导的裂变驱动脂肪酸和线粒体从肝星状细胞向肿瘤细胞共转移,从而促进肿瘤发生

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作者:Zhang La, Zhou Baoyong, Yang Jun, Ren Cong, Luo Jing, Li Zhenghang, Liu Qiang, Huang Zuotian, Wu Zhongjun, Jiang Ning
The tumor margin of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a critical zone where cancer cells invade the surrounding stroma, exhibiting unique and more invasive metabolic and migratory features compared to the tumor center, driving tumor expansion beyond the primary lesion. Studies have shown that at this critical interface, HCC cells primarily rely on fatty acid oxidation to meet their energy demands, although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study demonstrates that activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) at the tumor margin play a pivotal role in sustaining the metabolic needs of HCC cells. Specifically, it is discovered that mitochondrial fission regulator 2 (MTFR2) in HSCs interacts with dynamin-related protein 1 (DRP1, a known mitochondrial fission machinery), preventing its lysosomal degradation, which in turn promotes mitochondrial fission. This MTFR2-driven mitochondrial fission enhances the transfer of both fatty acids and mitochondria to HCC cells, supplying essential metabolic substrates and reinforcing the mitochondrial machinery critical for tumor growth. The findings suggest that targeting MTFR2-driven mitochondrial fission may offer a novel therapeutic avenue for interfering with the metabolic crosstalk between tumor cells and the stromal niche.

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