Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology, School of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Mol Cancer Res. 2019 Jul;17(7):1545-1555. doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-18-0618. Epub 2019 Mar 22.
With the large number of women diagnosed and treated for breast cancer each year, the importance of studying recurrence has become evident due to most deaths from breast cancer resulting from tumor recurrence following therapy. To mitigate this, cellular and molecular pathways used by residual disease prior to recurrence must be studied. An altered metabolism has long been considered a hallmark of cancer, and several recent studies have gone further to report metabolic dysfunction and alterations as key to understanding the underlying behavior of dormant and recurrent cancer cells. Our group has used two probes, 2-[N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1, 3-diaxol-4-yl) amino]-2-deoxyglucose (2-NBDG) and tetramethyl rhodamine ethyl ester (TMRE), to image glucose uptake and mitochondrial membrane potential, respectively, to report changes in metabolism between primary tumors, regression, residual disease, and after regrowth in genetically engineered mouse (GEM)-derived mammospheres. Imaging revealed unique metabolic phenotypes across the stages of tumor development. Although primary mammospheres overexpressing Her2 maintained increased glucose uptake ("Warburg effect"), after Her2 downregulation, during regression and residual disease, mammospheres appeared to switch to oxidative phosphorylation. Interestingly, in mammospheres where Her2 overexpression was turned back on to model recurrence, glucose uptake was lowest, indicating a potential change in substrate preference following the reactivation of Her2, reeliciting growth. Our findings highlight the importance of imaging metabolic adaptions to gain insight into the fundamental behaviors of residual and recurrent disease. IMPLICATIONS: This study demonstrates these functional fluorescent probes' ability to report metabolic adaptations during primary tumor growth, regression, residual disease, and regrowth in Her2 breast tumors.
每年都有大量女性被诊断和治疗乳腺癌,由于大多数乳腺癌死亡是由于治疗后肿瘤复发所致,因此研究复发的重要性已经显而易见。为了减轻这种情况,必须研究复发前残留疾病所使用的细胞和分子途径。代谢改变长期以来一直被认为是癌症的一个标志,最近有几项研究更进一步地报告了代谢功能障碍和改变是理解休眠和复发癌细胞潜在行为的关键。我们的小组使用了两种探针,2-[N-(7-硝基苯-2-恶唑-1,3-二恶烷-4-基)氨基]-2-脱氧葡萄糖(2-NBDG)和四甲基罗丹明乙酯(TMRE),分别来成像葡萄糖摄取和线粒体膜电位,以报告遗传工程小鼠(GEM)衍生的类乳腺球体中原发肿瘤、消退、残留疾病和再生长之间代谢变化。成像显示了在肿瘤发展的各个阶段独特的代谢表型。尽管过表达 Her2 的原发性乳腺球体保持增加的葡萄糖摄取(“Warburg 效应”),但在 Her2 下调后、在消退和残留疾病期间,乳腺球体似乎转而进行氧化磷酸化。有趣的是,在 Her2 过表达被重新激活以模拟复发的乳腺球体中,葡萄糖摄取最低,表明 Her2 重新激活后底物偏好可能发生变化,从而重新引发生长。我们的研究结果强调了成像代谢适应以深入了解残留和复发疾病基本行为的重要性。意义:本研究证明了这些功能性荧光探针在 Her2 乳腺癌中报告原发性肿瘤生长、消退、残留疾病和再生长过程中代谢适应的能力。