Severely polarized extracellular acidity around tumour cells.
Qiang FengZachary T BennettAnthony GrichukRaymundo PantojaTongyi HuangBrandon FaubertGang HuangMingyi ChenRalph J DeBerardinisBaran D SumerJinming GaoPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2024)
Extracellular pH impacts many molecular, cellular and physiological processes, and hence is tightly regulated. Yet, in tumours, dysregulated cancer cell metabolism and poor vascular perfusion cause the tumour microenvironment to become acidic. Here by leveraging fluorescent pH nanoprobes with a transistor-like activation profile at a pH of 5.3, we show that, in cancer cells, hydronium ions are excreted into a small extracellular region. Such severely polarized acidity (pH <5.3) is primarily caused by the directional co-export of protons and lactate, as we show for a diverse panel of cancer cell types via the genetic knockout or inhibition of monocarboxylate transporters, and also via nanoprobe activation in multiple tumour models in mice. We also observed that such spot acidification in ex vivo stained snap-frozen human squamous cell carcinoma tissue correlated with the expression of monocarboxylate transporters and with the exclusion of cytotoxic T cells. Severely spatially polarized tumour acidity could be leveraged for cancer diagnosis and therapy.
Keyphrases
- squamous cell carcinoma
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- type diabetes
- living cells
- cell cycle arrest
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- fluorescence imaging
- long non coding rna
- copy number
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- water soluble
- aqueous solution