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Residual OXPHOS is required to drive primary and metastatic lung tumours in an orthotopic breast cancer model

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-26, 20:43 authored by Patries Herst, G Carson, D Lewthwaite, David Eccles, A Schmidt, A Wilson, Carole GrassoCarole Grasso, D O’Sullivan, J Neuzil, Melanie-Jane McConnellMelanie-Jane McConnell, M Berridge
Background: Fast adaptation of glycolytic and mitochondrial energy pathways to changes in the tumour microenvironment is a hallmark of cancer. Purely glycolytic ρ0 tumour cells do not form primary tumours unless they acquire healthy mitochondria from their micro-environment. Here we explored the effects of severely compromised respiration on the metastatic capability of 4T1 mouse breast cancer cells. Methods: 4T1 cell lines with different levels of respiratory capacity were generated; the Seahorse extracellular flux analyser was used to evaluate oxygen consumption rates, fluorescent confocal microscopy to assess the number of SYBR gold-stained mitochondrial DNA nucleoids, and the presence of the ATP5B protein in the cytoplasm and fluorescent in situ nuclear hybridization was used to establish ploidy. MinION nanopore RNA sequence analysis was used to compare mitochondrial DNA transcription between cell lines. Orthotopic injection was used to determine the ability of cells to metastasize to the lungs of female Balb/c mice. Results: OXPHOS-deficient ATP5B-KO3.1 cells did not generate primary tumours. Severely OXPHOS compromised ρ0D5 cells generated both primary tumours and lung metastases. Cells generated from lung metastasis of both OXPHOS-competent and OXPHOS-compromised cells formed primary tumours but no metastases when re-injected into mice. OXPHOS-compromised cells significantly increased their mtDNA content, but this did not result in increased OXPHOS capacity, which was not due to decreased mtDNA transcription. Gene set enrichment analysis suggests that certain cells derived from lung metastases downregulate their epithelial-to-mesenchymal related pathways. Conclusion: In summary, OXPHOS is required for tumorigenesis in this orthotopic mouse breast cancer model but even very low levels of OXPHOS are sufficient to generate both primary tumours and lung metastases.

History

Preferred citation

Herst, P., Carson, G., Lewthwaite, D., Eccles, D., Schmidt, A., Wilson, A., Grasso, C., O’Sullivan, D., Neuzil, J., McConnell, M. & Berridge, M. (2024). Residual OXPHOS is required to drive primary and metastatic lung tumours in an orthotopic breast cancer model. Frontiers in Oncology, 14, 1362786-. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1362786

Journal title

Frontiers in Oncology

Volume

14

Publication date

2024-01-01

Pagination

1362786

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2024-05-01

ISSN

2234-943X

eISSN

2234-943X

Language

en