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Environmental Stress Affects the Activity of Metabolic and Growth Factor Signaling Networks and Induces Autophagy Markers in MCF7 Breast Cancer Cells
Pedro Casado, Benoît Bilanges, Vinothini Rajeeve, Bart Vanhaesebroeck, Pedro R. Cutillas
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics · 2014 · ▲ 38 citations
Disabled macroautophagy
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Altered intercellular communication
Cell culture / in vitro
Abstract
Phosphoproteomic techniques are contributing to our understanding of how signaling pathways interact and regulate biological processes. This technology is also being used to characterize how signaling networks are remodeled during disease progression and to identify biomarkers of signaling pathway activity and of responses to cancer therapy. A potential caveat in these studies is that phosphorylation is a very dynamic modification that can substantially change during the course of an experiment or the retrieval and processing of cellular samples. Here, we investigated how exposure of cells to ambient conditions modulates phosphorylation and signaling pathway activity in the MCF7 breast cancer cell line. About 1.5% of 3,500 sites measured showed a significant change in phosphorylation extent upon exposure of cells to ambient conditions for 15 min. The effects of this perturbation in modifying phosphorylation patterns did not involve random changes due to stochastic activation of kinases and phosphatases. Instead, exposure of cells to ambient conditions elicited an environmental stress reaction that involved a coordinated response to a metabolic stress situation, which included: (1) the activation of AMPK; (2) the inhibition of PI3K, AKT, and ERK; (3) an increase in markers of protein synthesis inhibition at the level of translation elongation; and (4) an increase in autophagy(definition) markers. We also observed that maintaining cells in ice modified but did not completely abolish this metabolic stress response. In summary, exposure of cells to ambient conditions affects the activity of signaling networks previously implicated in metabolic and growth factor signaling. Mass spectrometry data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD000472.
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- 10.1074/mcp.m113.034751
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- 2026-06-18 MST
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APA
Casado, P., Bilanges, B., Rajeeve, V., Vanhaesebroeck, B., & Cutillas, P.R. (2014). Environmental Stress Affects the Activity of Metabolic and Growth Factor Signaling Networks and Induces Autophagy Markers in MCF7 Breast Cancer Cells. <em>Molecular & Cellular Proteomics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.m113.034751
Vancouver
Casado P, Bilanges B, Rajeeve V, Vanhaesebroeck B, Cutillas PR. Environmental Stress Affects the Activity of Metabolic and Growth Factor Signaling Networks and Induces Autophagy Markers in MCF7 Breast Cancer Cells. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics. 2014. doi:10.1074/mcp.m113.034751.
BibTeX
@article{pedro2014Enviro,
title = {Environmental Stress Affects the Activity of Metabolic and Growth Factor Signaling Networks and Induces Autophagy Markers in MCF7 Breast Cancer Cells},
author = {Pedro Casado and Benoît Bilanges and Vinothini Rajeeve and Bart Vanhaesebroeck and Pedro R. Cutillas},
journal = {Molecular & Cellular Proteomics},
year = {2014},
doi = {10.1074/mcp.m113.034751},
}
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