Ddre-25. investigating mitochondrial slc25a transporters involved in supporting brain tumour metabolism and survival under hypoxic conditions

Neuro-Oncology Advances(2021)

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摘要
Abstract Advancements in prevention, detection and treatment over the last 40 years have significantly transformed cancer healthcare however there are a few cancers, such as brain tumours, which are consistently lagging behind. The most common adult brain tumour is glioma; a highly aggressive cancer that invades deep into the surrounding brain consequently making treatment challenging. The severe hypoxic nature of glioma adds further complications to therapeutic efficacy as hypoxia limits efficient drug delivery as well as increasing treatment resistance. Therapies that therefore target both the hypoxic tumour microenvironment and metabolic pathways that sustain growth have significant potential to improve patient prognosis. It is well known that cancer cells demonstrate an abnormal metabolism, resulting in an altered requirement for amino acids to aid uncontrolled proliferation. Furthermore, tumour metabolism can also be influenced by this hostile hypoxic microenvironment, leading to a more malignant phenotype. We are therefore interested in a family of mitochondrial transporters, SLC25A, which translocate numerous solutes across the mitochondrial membrane and are crucial for many metabolic reactions. TCGA analysis has shown that many of these amino acid carriers are upregulated in glioma. Remarkably however, around 23 of the 53 mammalian SLC25A members lack defined substrate selectivity and so we are interested in identifying which transporters are particularly important in the metabolic adaptation to hypoxia. Using CRISPR and siRNA technologies we have identified transporters that are functionally required to maintain cell proliferation of glioma cell lines and patient tumour cells. Furthermore, using stable isotope-enriched nutrients, we have identified novel means by which glioma cell metabolism can be perturbed by inhibition of these transporters. Characterising which SLC25A transporters are important for hypoxic tumour metabolism could therefore expose a way to exploit these hypoxic areas subsequently making them more vulnerable to treatment and thus impacting patient survival.
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