β-catenin-activated hepatocellular carcinomas are addicted to fatty acids

Author:

Senni Nadia,Savall Mathilde,Cabrerizo Granados David,Alves-Guerra Marie-Clotilde,Sartor Chiara,Lagoutte Isabelle,Gougelet Angélique,Terris Benoit,Gilgenkrantz Hélène,Perret Christine,Colnot Sabine,Bossard Pascale

Abstract

ObjectivesCTNNB1-mutated hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) constitute a major part of human HCC and are largely inaccessible to target therapy. Yet, little is known about the metabolic reprogramming induced by β-catenin oncogenic activation in the liver. We aimed to decipher such reprogramming and assess whether it may represent a new avenue for targeted therapy of CTNNB1-mutated HCC.DesignWe used mice with hepatocyte-specific oncogenic activation of β-catenin to evaluate metabolic reprogramming using metabolic fluxes on tumourous explants and primary hepatocytes. We assess the role of Pparα in knock-out mice and analysed the consequences of fatty acid oxidation (FAO) using etomoxir. We explored the expression of the FAO pathway in an annotated human HCC dataset.Resultsβ-catenin-activated HCC were not glycolytic but intensively oxidised fatty acids. We found that Pparα is a β-catenin target involved in FAO metabolic reprograming. Deletion of Pparα was sufficient to block the initiation and progression of β-catenin-dependent HCC development. FAO was also enriched in human CTNNB1-mutated HCC, under the control of the transcription factor PPARα.ConclusionsFAO induced by β-catenin oncogenic activation in the liver is the driving force of the β-catenin-induced HCC. Inhibiting FAO by genetic and pharmacological approaches blocks HCC development, showing that inhibition of FAO is a suitable therapeutic approach for CTNNB1-mutated HCC.

Funder

Fondation ARC pour la Recherche sur le Cancer

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Association Française pour l’Etude du Foie

Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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