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Inducing cancer indolence by targeting mitochondrial Complex I is potentiated by blocking macrophage-mediated adaptive responses

Authors :
Laura Benedetta Amato
Ilaria Malanchi
Giulia Girolimetti
Nikkitha Umesh Ganesh
Anna Maria Porcelli
Silvia Vidali
Michele Vidone
Marta Columbaro
Andrea Cossarizza
Giulia Leone
Moira Ragazzi
Renaud Vatrinet
Luigi Ombrato
Giuseppe Gasparre
Manuela Sollazzo
Luisa Iommarini
Victoria L. Bridgeman
Monica De Luise
Lara Gibellini
Ivana Kurelac
Maurizio Baldassarre
René G. Feichtinger
Barbara Kofler
Sarah Foriel
Daniela Grifoni
Kurelac, Ivana
Iommarini, Luisa
Vatrinet, Renaud
Amato, Laura Benedetta
De Luise, Monica
Leone, Giulia
Girolimetti, Giulia
Umesh Ganesh, Nikkitha
Bridgeman, Victoria Louise
Ombrato, Luigi
Columbaro, Marta
Ragazzi, Moira
Gibellini, Lara
Sollazzo, Manuela
Feichtinger, Rene Gunther
Vidali, Silvia
Baldassarre, Maurizio
Foriel, Sarah
Vidone, Michele
Cossarizza, Andrea
Grifoni, Daniela
Kofler, Barbara
Malanchi, Ilaria
Porcelli, Anna Maria
Gasparre, Giuseppe
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-18 (2019), DOAJ-Articles, Archivio istituzionale della ricerca-Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Converting carcinomas in benign oncocytomas has been suggested as a potential anti-cancer strategy. One of the oncocytoma hallmarks is the lack of respiratory complex I (CI). Here we use genetic ablation of this enzyme to induce indolence in two cancer types, and show this is reversed by allowing the stabilization of Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1 alpha (HIF-1α). We further show that on the long run CI-deficient tumors re-adapt to their inability to respond to hypoxia, concordantly with the persistence of human oncocytomas. We demonstrate that CI-deficient tumors survive and carry out angiogenesis, despite their inability to stabilize HIF-1α. Such adaptive response is mediated by tumor associated macrophages, whose blockage improves the effect of CI ablation. Additionally, the simultaneous pharmacological inhibition of CI function through metformin and macrophage infiltration through PLX-3397 impairs tumor growth in vivo in a synergistic manner, setting the basis for an efficient combinatorial adjuvant therapy in clinical trials.<br />Lack of respiratory complex I is a hallmark of oncocytomas. Here the authors show that inactivation of this complex via knockout of the NDUFS3 subunit or using metformin, converts tumors from an aggressive phenotype into low-proliferative oncocytomas, which can be further inhibited by targeting pro-tumorigenic macrophages.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-18 (2019), DOAJ-Articles, Archivio istituzionale della ricerca-Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d873125abd3a5f79b566d2ad8b0e33e