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Mitochondrial reprogramming via ATP5H loss promotes multimodal cancer therapy resistance

Authors :
Song, Kwon-Ho
Kim, Jae-Hoon
Lee, Young-Ho
Bae, Hyun Cheol
Lee, Hyo-Jung
Woo, Seon Rang
Oh, Se Jin
Lee, Kyung- Mi
Yee, Cassian
Kim, Bo Wook
Cho, Hanbyoul
Chung, Eun Joo
Chung, Joon- Yong
Hewitt, Stephen M.
Chung, Tae-Wook
Ha, Ki-Tae
Bae, Young-Ki
Mao, Chih- Ping
Yang, Andrew
Wu, T.C.
Kim, Tae Woo
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. September, 2018, Vol. 128 Issue 9, p4098, 17 p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The host immune system plays a pivotal role in the emergence of tumor cells that are refractory to multiple clinical interventions including immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy. Here, we examined the molecular mechanisms by which the immune system triggers cross-resistance to these interventions. By examining the biological changes in murine and tumor cells subjected to sequential rounds of in vitro or in vivo immune selection via cognate cytotoxic T lymphocytes, we found that multimodality resistance arises through a core metabolic reprogramming pathway instigated by epigenetic loss of the ATP synthase subunit ATP5H, which leads to ROS accumulation and HIF-1[alpha] stabilization under normoxia. Furthermore, this pathway confers to tumor cells a stem-like and invasive phenotype. In vivo delivery of antioxidants reverses these phenotypic changes and resensitizes tumor cells to therapy. ATP5H loss in the tumor is strongly linked to failure of therapy, disease progression, and poor survival in patients with cancer. Collectively, our results reveal a mechanism underlying immune-driven multimodality resistance to cancer therapy and demonstrate that rational targeting of mitochondrial metabolic reprogramming in tumor cells may overcome this resistance. We believe these results hold important implications for the clinical management of cancer.<br />Introduction The adaptation of tumor cells to immune surveillance as well as the emergence of refractory tumor cells after initial therapy are responsible for eventual disease relapse, progression, and metastasis. [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
128
Issue :
9
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.553759926
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI96804