Metabolic Reprogramming and Dependencies Associated with Epithelial Cancer Stem Cells Independent of the Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition Program

Author:

Aguilar Esther1,Marin de Mas Igor1,Zodda Erika12,Marin Silvia1,Morrish Fionnuala3,Selivanov Vitaly1,Meca-Cortés Óscar2,Delowar Hossain2,Pons Mònica2,Izquierdo Inés1,Celià-Terrassa Toni2,de Atauri Pedro1,Centelles Josep J.1,Hockenbery David3,Thomson Timothy M.2,Cascante Marta1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Diagonal 643, Barcelona, Spain

2. Department of Cell Biology, Molecular Biology Institute, National Research Council (IBMB-CSIC), Barcelona, Spain

3. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA

Abstract

Abstract In solid tumors, cancer stem cells (CSCs) can arise independently of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). In spite of recent efforts, the metabolic reprogramming associated with CSC phenotypes uncoupled from EMT is poorly understood. Here, by using metabolomic and fluxomic approaches, we identify major metabolic profiles that differentiate metastatic prostate epithelial CSCs (e-CSCs) from non-CSCs expressing a stable EMT. We have found that the e-CSC program in our cellular model is characterized by a high plasticity in energy substrate metabolism, including an enhanced Warburg effect, a greater carbon and energy source flexibility driven by fatty acids and amino acid metabolism and an essential reliance on the proton buffering capacity conferred by glutamine metabolism. An analysis of transcriptomic data yielded a metabolic gene signature for our e-CSCs consistent with the metabolomics and fluxomics analyses that correlated with tumor progression and metastasis in prostate cancer and in 11 additional cancer types. Interestingly, an integrated metabolomics, fluxomics, and transcriptomics analysis allowed us to identify key metabolic players regulated at the post-transcriptional level, suggesting potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets to effectively forestall metastasis.

Funder

MICINN

European Comission FEDER-Una manera de hacer Europa); Agència Catalana d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca

ICREA Foundation (Generalitat de Catalunya) and European Commission

MINECO

AGAUR

NIH

EC Marie Curie grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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