Metabolic diversity within breast cancer brain-tropic cells determines metastatic fitness

乳腺癌脑趋向细胞内的代谢多样性决定了其转移适应性

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作者:Pravat Kumar Parida ,Mauricio Marquez-Palencia ,Vidhya Nair ,Akash K Kaushik ,Kangsan Kim ,Jessica Sudderth ,Eduardo Quesada-Diaz ,Ambar Cajigas ,Vamsidhara Vemireddy ,Paula I Gonzalez-Ericsson ,Melinda E Sanders ,Bret C Mobley ,Kenneth Huffman ,Sunati Sahoo ,Prasanna Alluri ,Cheryl Lewis ,Yan Peng ,Robert M Bachoo ,Carlos L Arteaga ,Ariella B Hanker ,Ralph J DeBerardinis ,Srinivas Malladi

Abstract

HER2+ breast cancer patients are presented with either synchronous (S-BM), latent (Lat), or metachronous (M-BM) brain metastases. However, the basis for disparate metastatic fitness among disseminated tumor cells of similar oncotype within a distal organ remains unknown. Here, employing brain metastatic models, we show that metabolic diversity and plasticity within brain-tropic cells determine metastatic fitness. Lactate secreted by aggressive metastatic cells or lactate supplementation to mice bearing Lat cells limits innate immunosurveillance and triggers overt metastasis. Attenuating lactate metabolism in S-BM impedes metastasis, while M-BM adapt and survive as residual disease. In contrast to S-BM, Lat and M-BM survive in equilibrium with innate immunosurveillance, oxidize glutamine, and maintain cellular redox homeostasis through the anionic amino acid transporter xCT. Moreover, xCT expression is significantly higher in matched M-BM brain metastatic samples compared to primary tumors from HER2+ breast cancer patients. Inhibiting xCT function attenuates residual disease and recurrence in these preclinical models. Keywords: HER2; breast cancer brain metastasis; immune surveillance; late recurrences; metabolism; metastasis; metastatic dormancy; metastatic latency; redox homeostasis; relapse.

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