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Targeting tumor-initiating cells: Eliminating anabolic cancer stem cells with inhibitors of protein synthesis or by mimicking caloric restriction
Rebecca Lamb, Hannah Harrison, Duncan L. Smith, Paul A. Townsend, Thomas Jackson, Béla Ózsvári, Ubaldo Martinez‐Outschoorn, Richard G. Pestell, Anthony Howell, Michael P. Lisanti, Federica Sotgia
Oncotarget · 2015 · ▲ 62 citations
Loss of proteostasis
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Stem-cell exhaustion
Altered intercellular communication
Caloric restriction
Rapamycin / mTOR inhibition
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Abstract
// Rebecca Lamb 1,2 , Hannah Harrison 1,2 , Duncan L. Smith 3 , Paul A. Townsend 1 , Thomas Jackson 1 , Bela Ozsvari 1,2 , Ubaldo E. Martinez-Outschoorn 4 , Richard G. Pestell 4 , Anthony Howell 1,2 , Michael P. Lisanti 1,2 and Federica Sotgia 1,2 1 The Manchester Centre for Cellular Metabolism (MCCM), Institute of Cancer Sciences, University of Manchester, UK 2 The Breakthrough Breast Cancer Research Unit, Institute of Cancer Sciences, University of Manchester, UK 3 The Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute, University of Manchester, UK 4 The Kimmel Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA Correspondence: Michael P. Lisanti, email: // Federica Sotgia, email: // Keywords : tumor initiating cells, protein synthesis, puromycin, mTOR(definition)-inhibiting drug studied for extending healthspan and lifespan." style="text-decoration:underline dotted; text-underline-offset:2px; cursor:help;">rapamycin(definition), methionine restriction Received : December 18, 2014 Accepted : January 21, 2015 Published : February 10, 2015 Abstract We have used an unbiased proteomic profiling strategy to identify new potential therapeutic targets in tumor-initiating cells (TICs), a.k.a., cancer stem cells (CSCs). Towards this end, the proteomes of mammospheres from two breast cancer cell lines were directly compared to attached monolayer cells. This allowed us to identify proteins that were highly over-expressed in CSCs and/or progenitor cells. We focused on ribosomal proteins and protein folding chaperones, since they were markedly over-expressed in mammospheres. Overall, we identified >80 molecules specifically associated with protein synthesis that were commonly upregulated in mammospheres. Most of these proteins were also transcriptionally upregulated in human breast cancer cells in vivo , providing evidence for their potential clinical relevance. As such, increased mRNA translation could provide a novel mechanism for enhancing the proliferative clonal expansion of TICs. The proteomic findings were functionally validated using known inhibitors of protein synthesis, via three independent approaches. For example, puromycin (which mimics the structure of tRNAs and competitively inhibits protein synthesis) preferentially targeted CSCs in both mammospheres and monolayer cultures, and was ~10-fold more potent for eradicating TICs, than “bulk” cancer cells. In addition, rapamycin, which inhibits mTOR and hence protein synthesis, was very effective at reducing mammosphere formation, at nanomolar concentrations. Finally, mammosphere formation was also markedly inhibited by methionine restriction, which mimics the positive effects of caloric restriction(definition) in cultured cells. Remarkably, mammosphere formation was >18-fold more sensitive to methionine restriction and replacement, as directly compared to monolayer cell proliferation. Methionine is absolutely required for protein synthesis, since every protein sequence starts with a methionine residue. Thus, the proliferation and survival of CSCs is very sensitive to the inhibition of protein synthesis, using multiple independent approaches. Our findings have important clinical implications, since they may also explain the positive therapeutic effects of PI3-kinase inhibitors and AKT inhibitors, as they ultimately converge on mTOR signaling and would block protein synthesis. We conclude that inhibition of mRNA translation by pharmacological or protein/methionine restriction may be effective strategies for eliminating TICs. Our data also indicate a novel mechanism by which caloric/protein restriction may reduce tumor growth, by targeting protein synthesis in anabolic tumor-initiating cancer cells.
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- 10.18632/oncotarget.3278
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APA
Lamb, R., Harrison, H., Smith, D.L., Townsend, P.A., Jackson, T., Ózsvári, B., Martinez‐Outschoorn, U., Pestell, R.G., Howell, A., Lisanti, M.P., & Sotgia, F. (2015). Targeting tumor-initiating cells: Eliminating anabolic cancer stem cells with inhibitors of protein synthesis or by mimicking caloric restriction. <em>Oncotarget</em>. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.3278
Vancouver
Lamb R, Harrison H, Smith DL, Townsend PA, Jackson T, Ózsvári B, et al. Targeting tumor-initiating cells: Eliminating anabolic cancer stem cells with inhibitors of protein synthesis or by mimicking caloric restriction. Oncotarget. 2015. doi:10.18632/oncotarget.3278.
BibTeX
@article{rebecca2015Target,
title = {Targeting tumor-initiating cells: Eliminating anabolic cancer stem cells with inhibitors of protein synthesis or by mimicking caloric restriction},
author = {Rebecca Lamb and Hannah Harrison and Duncan L. Smith and Paul A. Townsend and Thomas Jackson and Béla Ózsvári and Ubaldo Martinez‐Outschoorn and Richard G. Pestell and Anthony Howell and Michael P. Lisanti and Federica Sotgia},
journal = {Oncotarget},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.18632/oncotarget.3278},
}
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