Tolerable glycometabolic stress boosts cancer cell resilience through altered N-glycosylation and Notch signaling activation.
Shungo IwamotoTakashi KobayashiHisatoshi HanamatsuIkuko YokotaYukiko TeranishiAkiho IwamotoMiyu KitagawaSawako AshidaAyane SakuraiSuguru MatsuoYuma MyokanAiyu SugimotoRyo UshiodaKazuhiro NagataNoriko GotohKazuki NakajimaTakashi NishikazeJun-Ichi FurukawaNaoki ItanoPublished in: Cell death & disease (2024)
Chronic metabolic stress paradoxically elicits pro-tumorigenic signals that facilitate cancer stem cell (CSC) development. Therefore, elucidating the metabolic sensing and signaling mechanisms governing cancer cell stemness can provide insights into ameliorating cancer relapse and therapeutic resistance. Here, we provide convincing evidence that chronic metabolic stress triggered by hyaluronan production augments CSC-like traits and chemoresistance by partially impairing nucleotide sugar metabolism, dolichol lipid-linked oligosaccharide (LLO) biosynthesis and N-glycan assembly. Notably, preconditioning with either low-dose tunicamycin or 2-deoxy-D-glucose, which partially interferes with LLO biosynthesis, reproduced the promoting effects of hyaluronan production on CSCs. Multi-omics revealed characteristic changes in N-glycan profiles and Notch signaling activation in cancer cells exposed to mild glycometabolic stress. Restoration of N-glycan assembly with glucosamine and mannose supplementation and Notch signaling blockade attenuated CSC-like properties and further enhanced the therapeutic efficacy of cisplatin. Therefore, our findings uncover a novel mechanism by which tolerable glycometabolic stress boosts cancer cell resilience through altered N-glycosylation and Notch signaling activation.
Keyphrases
- cancer stem cells
- low dose
- stem cells
- stress induced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- metabolic syndrome
- gene expression
- depressive symptoms
- single cell
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- papillary thyroid
- social support
- high dose
- cell wall
- anti inflammatory
- brain injury
- fatty acid
- blood glucose
- weight loss
- cerebral ischemia