Metabolic reprogramming from oxidative respiration to glycolysis is generally considered to be advantageous for tumor initiation and progression. However, we found that breast cancer cells forced to perform glycolysis acquired a vulnerability to PARP inhibitors. Small-molecule inhibition of mitochondrial respiration-using glyceollin I, metformin, or phenformin-induced overproduction of the oncometabolite lactate, which acidified the extracellular milieu and repressed the expression of homologous recombination (HR)-associated DNA repair genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypoxia contributes to tumor progression and metastasis, and hypoxically dysregulated RNA molecules may, thus, be implicated in poor outcomes. Canine oral melanoma (COM) has a particularly poor prognosis, and some hypoxia-mediated miRNAs are known to exist in this cancer; however, equivalent data on other hypoxically dysregulated non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) are lacking. Accordingly, we aimed to elucidate non-miRNA ncRNAs that may be mediated by hypoxia, targeting primary-site and metastatic COM cell lines and clinical COM tissue samples in next-generation sequencing (NGS), with subsequent qPCR validation and quantification in COM primary and metastatic cells and plasma and extracellular vesicles (EVs) for any identified ncRNA of interest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe senescent microenvironment and aged cells per se contribute to tissue remodeling, chronic inflammation, and age-associated dysfunction. However, the metabolic and epigenomic bases of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) remain largely unknown. Here, we show that ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY), a key enzyme in acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) synthesis, is essential for the pro-inflammatory SASP, independent of persistent growth arrest in senescent cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF