Copper drives remodeling of metabolic state and progression of clear cell renal cell carcinoma.
Megan E BischoffBehrouz ShamsaeiJuechen YangDina SecicBhargav VemuriJulie A ReiszAngelo D'AlessandroCaterina BartolacciRafal AdamczakLucas SchmidtJiang WangAmelia MartinesJacek BiesiadaKatherine E VestPier Paolo ScaglioniDavid R PlasKrushna C PatraShuchi GulatiJulio A Landero FigueroaJaroslaw MellerJohn T CunninghamMaria F Czyzyk-KrzeskaPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Copper (Cu) is an essential trace element required for mitochondrial respiration. Late-stage clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) accumulates Cu and allocates it to mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase. We show that Cu drives coordinated metabolic remodeling of bioenergy, biosynthesis and redox homeostasis, promoting tumor growth and progression of ccRCC. Specifically, Cu induces TCA cycle-dependent oxidation of glucose and its utilization for glutathione biosynthesis to protect against H 2 O 2 generated during mitochondrial respiration, therefore coordinating bioenergy production with redox protection. scRNA-seq determined that ccRCC progression involves increased expression of subunits of respiratory complexes, genes in glutathione and Cu metabolism, and NRF2 targets, alongside a decrease in HIF activity, a hallmark of ccRCC. Spatial transcriptomics identified that proliferating cancer cells are embedded in clusters of cells with oxidative metabolism supporting effects of metabolic states on ccRCC progression. Our work establishes novel vulnerabilities with potential for therapeutic interventions in ccRCC. Accumulation of copper is associated with progression and relapse of ccRCC and drives tumor growth.Cu accumulation and allocation to cytochrome c oxidase (CuCOX) remodels metabolism coupling energy production and nucleotide biosynthesis with maintenance of redox homeostasis.Cu induces oxidative phosphorylation via alterations in the mitochondrial proteome and lipidome necessary for the formation of the respiratory supercomplexes. Cu stimulates glutathione biosynthesis and glutathione derived specifically from glucose is necessary for survival of Cu Hi cells. Biosynthesis of glucose-derived glutathione requires activity of glutamyl pyruvate transaminase 2, entry of glucose-derived pyruvate to mitochondria via alanine, and the glutamate exporter, SLC25A22. Glutathione derived from glucose maintains redox homeostasis in Cu-treated cells, reducing Cu-H 2 O 2 Fenton-like reaction mediated cell death. Progression of human ccRCC is associated with gene expression signature characterized by induction of ETC/OxPhos/GSH/Cu-related genes and decrease in HIF/glycolytic genes in subpopulations of cancer cells. Enhanced, concordant expression of genes related to ETC/OxPhos, GSH, and Cu characterizes metabolically active subpopulations of ccRCC cells in regions adjacent to proliferative subpopulations of ccRCC cells, implicating oxidative metabolism in supporting tumor growth.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- aqueous solution
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- metal organic framework
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- blood glucose
- type diabetes
- single cell
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- nitric oxide
- hydrogen peroxide
- blood pressure
- metabolic syndrome
- pi k akt
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- insulin resistance
- heavy metals
- ionic liquid
- protein kinase
- genome wide identification