Institute of Molecular Genetics, Italian National Research Council (CNR), I‑27100 Pavia, Italy.
Oncol Rep. 2019 Jun;41(6):3555-3564. doi: 10.3892/or.2019.7125. Epub 2019 Apr 17.
Neoplastic transformation is characterized by metabolic rewiring to sustain the elevated biosynthetic demands of highly proliferative cancer cells. To obtain the precursors for macromolecule biosynthesis, cancer cells avidly uptake and metabolize glucose and glutamine. Thus, targeting the availability or metabolism of these nutrients is an attractive anticancer therapeutic strategy. To improve our knowledge concerning how cancer cells respond to nutrient withdrawal, the response to glutamine and/or glucose starvation was studied in human in vitro transformed fibroblasts, deeply characterized at the cellular and molecular level. Concomitant starvation of both nutrients led to rapid loss of cellular adhesion (16 h after starvation), followed by cell death. Deprivation of glucose alone had the same effect, although at a later time (48 h after starvation), suggesting that glucose plays a key role in enabling cell attachment to the extracellular matrix. Glutamine deprivation did not induce rapid cell death, but caused a prolonged arrest of cellular proliferation; the cells started dying only 96 h after starvation. Before massive cell death occurred, the effects of all the starvation conditions were reversible. Autophagy activation was observed in cells incubated in the absence of glucose for more than 48 h, while autophagy was not detected under the other starvation conditions. Markers of apoptotic cell death, such as caspase 3, caspase 9 and poly(ADP‑ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP‑1) proteolytic fragments, were not observed under any growth condition. Glucose and/or glutamine deprivation caused very rapid PARP‑1 activation, with marked PARP‑1 (poly‑ADP) ribosylation and protein (poly‑ADP) ribosylation. This activation was not due to starvation‑induced DNA double‑strand breaks, which appeared at the late stages of deprivation, when most cells died. Collectively, these results highlight a broad range of consequences of glucose and glutamine starvation, which may be taken into account when nutrient availability is used as a target for anticancer therapies.
肿瘤的转化特征为代谢重编程,以维持高增殖性癌细胞升高的生物合成需求。为了获得大分子生物合成的前体,癌细胞会大量摄取和代谢葡萄糖和谷氨酰胺。因此,靶向这些营养物质的可用性或代谢是一种有吸引力的抗癌治疗策略。为了提高我们对癌细胞如何对营养剥夺做出反应的认识,在体外转化的人类成纤维细胞中研究了谷氨酰胺和/或葡萄糖饥饿的反应,这些细胞在细胞和分子水平上进行了深入的特征分析。同时剥夺两种营养物质会导致细胞迅速失去细胞黏附(饥饿后约 16 小时),随后发生细胞死亡。单独剥夺葡萄糖也会产生同样的效果,尽管时间稍晚(饥饿后约 48 小时),这表明葡萄糖在使细胞附着到细胞外基质方面起着关键作用。谷氨酰胺剥夺不会引起快速的细胞死亡,但会导致细胞增殖的长时间停滞;饥饿 96 小时后细胞才开始死亡。在大量细胞死亡发生之前,所有饥饿条件的作用都是可逆的。在没有葡萄糖的情况下孵育超过 48 小时时观察到自噬激活,而在其他饥饿条件下未检测到自噬。在任何生长条件下都没有观察到细胞凋亡的标志物,如 caspase 3、caspase 9 和多聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶 1(PARP-1)蛋白水解片段。葡萄糖和/或谷氨酰胺剥夺会导致非常迅速的 PARP-1 激活,伴有明显的 PARP-1(多聚-ADP)核糖基化和蛋白(多聚-ADP)核糖基化。这种激活不是由于饥饿诱导的 DNA 双链断裂引起的,DNA 双链断裂出现在剥夺的后期,此时大多数细胞已经死亡。总的来说,这些结果突出了葡萄糖和谷氨酰胺饥饿的广泛后果,在将营养物质的可用性作为抗癌治疗的靶点时应考虑这些后果。